Green Team

Intern Mike's First Blog Ever

on Friday, 16 March 2012. Posted in Green Team

Hello, <(^.^)>

This is my first week as an intern for Groundwork and its been time well spent. I love spending my time outside in the environment no matter the weather, so being able to be outside and help preserve and expand natures growth positively is a great experience I’m happy to be part of.

The Groundwork staff have a nice sense of humor always greet you with a smile and are extremely easy to get along with. I am glad to have been given the opportunity to be a part of Groundwork because, my family has wanted a little garden of fresh food in the backyard and with Groundwork that is part of what they teach you and have you do.

So with the experiences I will continue to have with Groundwork, hopefully one day soon, I can start my own garden and be able to enjoy eating fresh foods that I sprouted and grew myself.

A Blog From Adriana

on Monday, 14 November 2011. Posted in Green Team

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Hey Everyone,
It’s me Adriana Boutte again, and now its about my 5th week interning for Groundwork San Diego. Things have been great, from the office  to the Green Team meetings , and even at the Framers Market.
Working in the office is really great. It gives me a feeling of professionalism. It’s also pretty exciting too because I have such great coworkers. Lately contacting businesses such as Sea World and the museums of Balboa Park has been my main focus. I’ve gotten replies back from certain places and each time I do it makes me feel like I’ve accomplished something. It makes me proud to l know that I am completing the tasks at hand. Sometimes the waiting and the constant automated replies can get annoying but its well worth the wait. Soon enough the Green Team should be able to attend a fundamental event at a great site. I will keep you all posted with the latest.
Working at Farmers Market is a new thing for us as well. The founder has privileged Groundwork with the opportunity to hold our own booth.We provide pamphlets of what Groundwork San Diego is all about and even information about our Green Team. Along with that we mainly just have a good time and help out Ms. Dianne whose in charge of the market. For the record the location has been changed from behind churches to on Market before the entry into the Jacob’s Center. Maybe if you have the time on a Friday you wouldn’t mind coming out and joining us. There’s lots of fruits and vegetables and even some Ethiopian food that is a major hit, come and support us, if you’re into farmers market you’ll have a ball.
The Green Team is coming along semi-well also. What are main focus is right now is to make the Green Team movement expand more. We don’t have nearly as much people as we’d like to have on the team. It would make our world a better place if more people started to care about our environment. In efforts to make it more widespread we’ve began making banners that will be visible to the community while driving by on the freeway. Some other things that our team does is teach about environmental issues along with some actual restoration work in the nearby watersheds of southeast San Diego. Those events usually take place on Saturday mornings, if anybody is ever interested we could always use a helping hand and the contact information is listed on our site to find out further details.
Overall I feel like I’ve been a very successful part of the crew and I’m glad I’m receiving the opportunity to work with such a great organization. These first few weeks have been great and I’m sure they will only get better.
Adriana Boutte
Intern

Zen's first blog

on Wednesday, 05 October 2011. Posted in Green Team

Hi,


My experience as an intern so far was really great. I am excited about working to help the environment and learning new things. It is a great experience and I look forward to continuing working with the Green Team in keeping the environment safe. In addition, I look forward to help improving/preserving the wildlife.

I’m excited to work with the Green Team in a plant restoration this Saturday where we will pull out the weeds and will take out the plants that are not native to the land. The Green Team has also been learning about and studying Phenology, which “is the study of periodic plants and animal life cycle events and how they are influenced by seasonal and interannual variations in climate.”

What I look forward doing in my internship this semester is helping Groundwork to stay on track with updating their website, writing blogs, making flyer's, etc. I know that it may be a big responsibility and I will try my best to stay on task.

dscf0567

Groundwork USA 2011 Assembly & Youth Summit in Denver

Written by Genevieve on Tuesday, 04 October 2011. Posted in Green Team

I have the best job. All I ever wanted out of a career was to meet interesting people, travel a little, and make the world a measure more beautiful. Imagine, then, how I felt coming back from a four-day excursion from San Diego to Denver, Colorado, joined by some of the most engaged and forward-thinking environmentalists, and out into the Rocky Mountains National Park. It's been a few years since Groundwork San Diego has been able to send representatives to the Groundwork USA Annual Assembly & Youth Summit, and my youth, Yvezee and Lerner, and I are so very fortunate to be the first group of local delegates to make a return to the national networking scene. First, a little background:

Groundwork is an international organization of independent environmental trusts in Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America. There are about forty Groundwork trusts in the States and they convene once a year to network to share goals, challenges, and best practices with colleagues. The location changes; this year's conference was hosted by Groundwork Denver, and so we spent one evening at a Ramada in Denver and two more at the YMCA of the Rockies, the largest (and possibly the most luxurious) YMCA in America.

The first evening, we checked into the hotel and walked a few blocks to Groundwork Denver's office. Dinner was catered outdoors, in between buildings, and entirely vegetarian. I greatly enjoyed the Waldorf salad and the pita with a variety of different hummus (what's the plural of hummus?). A DJ maintained an upbeat atmosphere, despite the rain in the courtyard. The youth returned to the Ramada after dinner for a team-building activity. Technically, I think I was supposed to go back for that as well, but I stayed behind to meet Executive Directors of other trusts and to hear tell of Groundwork Denver's latest endeavors (including a campaign designed to simultaneously draw customers to the city's local, independent businesses and provide those customers with modest discounts, as well as to promote walking, biking, or taking public transit instead of driving. I even met one man who was formerly involved in Groundwork San Diego, and knew more about our trust than I do!

The next morning, I woke up around 5:30 and had a little time for morning time yoga in my hotel room, which turned out to be a great thing—when we reached our destination in the Rockies, I had signed up for a 5.6 mile hike, and if you're as huge a fan of the film Zombieland as I am, you know it's actually very important to limber up. Breakfast consisted of a made-to-order omelet, apple slices, and a cup of the worst coffee I've ever tried to disguise with flavored creamer. Executive Directors were saddling up for a bicycle tour of Denver, followed by a day of workshopping, while the youth and youth leaders were on our way out of town by 7 AM, and this is the point where I made my biggest mistake of the trip: all were issued with warm fleeces and windbreakers on the first night when we signed up for hikes. I packed both in my suitcase, meaning to put them on when we got there...but we were fated to be separated, my luggage and I. One van took everyone's luggage. Three vans took all the youth and youth leaders, and we were not to see the luggage van until we came back from the hike that afternoon. Oops! I managed with an extra sweater borrowed from Shane and a plastic rain poncho gifted by the National Park staff. My toes were numb for the first half hour of our hike, but I did contrive to keep my high tops completely dry despite the rain.

img_4122My hike was one of the more strenuous, but it had to be the most enjoyable! On the way to Mills Lake, our guide, Dennis, told us stories of his various vertical expeditions, and related tales of unfortunate hikers, like the one who found himself stranded 400 feet off the trail head in deep snow and had to wait out the night in a burrow (he was rescued, not recovered, the next morning). We were never bereft of gorgeous scenery; trees stretched before our eyes as far as the mountainous view permitted, and new geological wonders such as glacial erratics, large boulders left in unlikely formations by ancient glaciers, greeted us constantly as we progressed. A clear stream cascaded down the mountain beside our path. Half a mile, maybe, after we made a last crossing on a wooden footbridge, we reached Mills Lake, partially stopped by a beaver family's dam. The lake's expanse was bordered by low hills which gave way to larger, snow-capped peaks, such as The Arrowhead, rising far behind them. We stopped here to have lunch, a classy packaged affair. The vegetarian lunch was a sliced apple and brie sandwich, couscous, an apple, and a bag of chips. Just as we sat down to dine (glory!), the clouds opened up above and finally poured sunshine on us instead of condensed water vapor. I stripped off the clingy plastic poncho and my fingerless gloves (I came so well equipped) and skipped down the mountain at the tail of the group.


The conference only got better, I am pleased to report. That night, after a brief nap and dinner, I attended an all-youth leaders meeting at the Y of the Rockies. This was apparently the first year there was such a meeting, and again, I rejoice for the opportunity to attend this particular Assembly. The meeting ran as a free-form trouble-shooting session, and culminated with the gathering of everyone present's contact information and the agreement that we would reach out to each other for resources and support throughout the year. Out of all the planned activities, this one proved the most useful to me, and the most important conclusion I came away with is this: as a member of a small environmental nonprofit organization, it's easy to get to feeling like we are the only ones fighting for a cause that's bigger than us, both philosophically and in terms of capacity. It's all to easy to feel isolated, like we're the only ones in the corporate world who care. The Groundwork Assembly showed me differently; there is a whole network of like-minded individuals across the nation, and they care about the things I care about, and they face similar challenges, and we are all building a movement in our communities from the ground up. It's almost never easy, but it's totally righteous.

302913_292647064084141_100000165490019_1470243_488320397_nThe next day was that of the Youth Summit. Everyone piled in the vans up to the mountains once more. When we arrived we were diverted for an hour or so into four service projects led by volunteer rangers; participants had the choice of building a snow fence to prevent erosion, of sweeping through campsites and cleaning them up, of taking part in the star thistle eradication effort, or of collecting seeds from wild roses for revegetation along a dirt road scheduled for maintenance. I went along collecting rose hips, which was entirely enjoyable—plus, we saw a large herd of elk on the ride back to the amphitheatre. The rest of the summit included a “Career Corral,” during which National Park and Fish & Wildlife employees informed the youth about their job descriptions and explained how they got started in their fields; a skit put on by Groundwork New Orleans and Groundwork Somerville; activities to gauge our communities and our involvement in them; and finally, an open forum on how to boost Green Team membership and interest. All was geared toward the youth, and I saw them responding positively and creatively. The Green Team skit was a work of especial entertainment.

The Youth Summit ended around four, and the rest of our time, we had free. There were informal networking sessions every night, during which I made innumerable contacts from around the country. The Groundwork Dallas Executive Director, Peter, has a scheme for a collaborative summer trip in 2012 between Dallas, San Diego, and Portland; I believe that footage of our Green Team's August expedition to Santa Monica and the Channel Islands will soon be featured on Groundwork Richmond's daily Green Screen Team Broadcast (if you haven't yet seen that video, do that here!); and if we ever make it up to the National Parks in San Francisco, I know I'll be calling on Ranger Matt.

IMG_4173In conclusion, I can't say enough good things about the Groundwork Assembly experience this year. My youth made lots of friends, I made lots of friends, and my youth and I bonded more than we could have in any normal setting (seriously, they call me Mom now). The time and dedicated effort it takes to keep our projects and programs running successfully makes it difficult to put work aside, even for something so important, but I'm so glad that the powers I report to saw fit to give me the time to attend the national conference with Lerner & Yvezee. Our attendance at the conference benefits us by renewing our connection to our parent organization and other trusts across the country, and introducing new concepts we can apply to our programming. Best of all, it reminded me how much I love my job!

Camping Trip Reflection

on Thursday, 15 September 2011. Posted in Green Team

In the Eyes of Yvezee and Lerner

This is Lerner and Yvezee from morse high school. As I type this we are riding the train back to San Diego. Our camp at the Santa Monica mountains reserves was really fun and inspirational. We learned an abundance of new things-- especially about revegetation and non-native vs. native plants. I realized the significance of native plants when the rangers told us that the non-native plants are invasive to a point where the native plants can't survive. It's important to have native plants not only because of it's natural resources that provide for us, whether it's food or useful implements, but because of the animals that feed among them. If the native plants start to die then everything else starts to crumble--animals become extinct and are forced to change and they might not survive. ); but anyways, overall, we learned a lot but still had fun. We feel extremely blessed to have gotten the opportunity to tag along with the EIS and Second Chance students on this trip. Thanks to all the coordinators, especially Ms. Kim for setting up all these arrangements and cooking delicious food! Signing off now, bye.

Ps. Join green team, kbye.

---yvezee and learner

 dscf0425


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