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A Living Library = A. L. L.

Everyone and everything on Earth and in Space is part of A Living Library of diversity: people, birds, trees, air, water, and all the things we create, such as - parks, gardens, schools, curricula, artworks, networks, communities, celebrations. A Living Library, or, A.L.L., for short, provides a way to understand that culture and technology are part of nature. It’s all nature.

A Living Library provides a powerful systemic framework, multiple methodologies and strategies for creating place-based, ecological change in communities and schools - locally and globally.

A.L.L. integrates local resources - past, present, future - and transforms them with community, to become vibrant, content-rich, art-filled, ecological learning landscapes; each Branch linked to another.

Updated by @alivinglibrary

Recent Updates

Jul '11

Even A Few More Photos of Tree Planting From Bernal Heights Living Library & Think Park Nature Walk

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We have so many great pictures of volunteers planting California Native Trees adding to the Bernal Heights Living Library & Think Park Nature Walk underway in San Francisco, leading to the Islais Creek at the south end of St. Mary's Park. 

Eventually, we envision linking more schools, parks, and other open spaces within the Islais Creek Watershed, the largest in SF, that interconnects at least 11 communities from: Noe Valley, Mission, Bernal, Potrero, Bayview, Portola, Crocker-Amazon, Excelsior, OMI, Sunnyside, Glen Park.

Below are a few more pics showing diverse areas of St. Mary's Park in South Bernal Heights !

Planting Native Oaks (Quercus agrifolia - Coast Live Oak) in 2010 on the Upper Ridge of St. Mary's and (Quercus spp. - Mixed Oaks ) on Path from Crescent Avenue leading to south side of Park and currently hidden, underground Islais Creek.

Jul '11

A Few More Photos of Tree Planting From Bernal Heights Living Library & Think Park Nature Walk

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As promised, below are a few more pictures that document the tremendous effort from so many, to plant California Native Trees along the developing Bernal Heights Living Library & Think Park Nature Walk leading  to the Islais Creek on the south side of St. Mary's Park, adjacent to Alemany Farm and Alemany Public Housing.

A big special thanks to John Miller, St Mary's & Holly Park Supervisor for SF Recreation & Park Department, who is a great colleague and friend in this enterprise.  He has led so many planting days and this summer is directing our Living Library MYEEP workers (Mayor's Office of Youth Employment) to keep the trees watered and staked.  THANK YOU, JOHN !!!!

More Planting In St. Mary's Park 2009 With One Brick Volunteers

Even Mas Planting of Mixed Native Oaks In St. Mary's with Salesforce Volunteers led by Michael Hunt, 2009.                                                Our Nature Walk is emerging !!

Still more pics to come soon !

Jul '11

A Few Photos of Tree Planting From Bernal Heights Living Library & Think Park Nature Walk

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Read the last post below from INDEPEN-DANCE DAY and enjoy a few pictures illustrating the tree planting throughout the Bernal Heights community over the last few years:

Planting shown below in Holly Park, St. Mary's Park, Junipero Serra Child Development Center, Holly Courts between 2009-2010. 

We have so many pics !  I will create another blog post for you soon, to view our ongoing transformation and creation of the Bernal Heights Living Library & Think Park Nature Walk !!

Holly Park 2009

St. Mary's Park, December 2009

Junipero Serra Child Development Center, December 2009

St. Mary's Park, January 2010

Holly Courts, March 2010



Jul '11

Bernal Heights Living Library & Think Park Nature Walk

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By Bonnie Ora Sherk © 2011 Founder & Director, Life Frames, Inc. & A Living Library

A Living Library  = A.L.L. Transforming communities and schools by interconnecting local biological, cultural, technological resources – past, present, future

A Think Park is meant to make us think, feel, and be more empathetic to each other and all species

Community plans have been underway for 10 years to create the Bernal Heights Living Library & Think Park Nature Walk linking schools, parks, streets, housing developments, and other open spaces leading to the Islais Creek at the south end of St. Mary’s Park. Already, almost 600 California Native Trees have been planted along Appleton in front of Junipero Serra Child Development Center and College Hill Reservoir, in Holly Courts, in Holly Park, and in St. Mary’s Park, and soon interpretive signage will be added, all funded by California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.  Plans are also being developed to include more plantings around Junipero Serra Elementary School, and in Alemany Public Housing Development, with understory and added interpretive signage for all sites, if another recently applied-for state grant is awarded.

A Community Master Plan for the Bernal Heights Living Library & Think Park Nature Walk was developed with diverse community participants including children, youth, and adults, led by Life Frames, Inc. and Bonnie Ora Sherk, in 2002-03, funded by Mayor’s Office of Community Development and San Francisco Foundation.  Trees were planted by school children, neighbors, volunteers from Salesforce, One Brick, Jewish Community Federation, with great help from Recreation & Park, Department Public Works, Housing Authority, SF Public Utilities Commission.   According to Karen Huggins, Public Housing Development President of Holly Courts’ Resident’s Council, “The Bernal Heights Living Library Nature Walk that will eventually frame the Islais Creek Watershed is more than just a nature walk.  It is a bridge connecting the whole community together with the same visions for the future, making a connection daily as we walk by each other.”

When fully implemented in future Phases, another goal of our work is to Frame the Islais Creek Watershed.  The Islais Creek Watershed is the largest in San Francisco and includes at least 11 communities:  Bernal Heights, Mission, Potrero Hill, Bayview-Hunter's Point, Portola, Crocker-Amazon, Excelsior, OMI, Sunnyside, Glen Park, Noe Valley.

The New Gold Is Old:  Fresh Water

Ultimately, a goal and opportunity, is to create the A.L.L.  Islais Creek Watershed  Nature Walk to interconnect the Watershed communities and 101 Freeway Interchanges that will become Islais Creek Watershed Northern & Southern Gateway Community Parks, which will also help to mitigate extreme flooding during rain events.  The future A.L.L. Nature Walk will include native trees and understory, integrated edible landscapes at school sites, interpretive signage and other related elements, all integrated with community and school education programs, including green skills job training.  The  A.L.L. Nature Walk will link multiple parks, schools, streets, public housing, rights-of-way, and other open spaces within the Watershed.

We also envision that we will be daylighting the creeks where possible, and using creek water to rehabilitate native habitat, and also using ground water and storm water for irrigation of new trees and understory plantings.  Also envisioned is linking diverse parts of the Watershed, through Green Powered Digital Gateways, so people in different communities can see how they are interconnected.

Another potential, is that St. Mary’s Park, where a large part of our Nature Walk is located, could also become a community-wide Watershed and Urban Forestry Education Center with hands-on, outdoor classrooms, in addition to those in the schools where we currently work.

On May10, 2010, Supervisor David Campos, based on our work and others, like Clean Water Action and Urban Creeks Council, called a public hearing for the Supervisor's Land Use Committee to address issues of daylighting creeks in San Francisco, particularly as it relates to the new SFPUC Wastewater Master Plan and development of new sewer infrastructure.  The result of all, has been to move the PUC towards a more holistic, systemic Whole Watershed approach, in which we will be able to separate, use, and daylight fresh creek water where possible, within our urban setting.  The New Gold Is Old:  Fresh Water.  Supervisor Campos will hold a follow-up Hearing to review PUC changes regarding daylighting creeks and related issues.

Branch Living Library & Think Parks

In addition to our Nature Walk and Watershed initiatives, Life Frames also develops Branch Living Library & Think Parks, funded by SF Department of Children, Youth & Their Families.  In SF, we currently work with over 800 children and youth each month, at 6 schools in 3 neighborhoods, with interdisciplinary, standards-based, hands-on ecological transformation of their school and community.  Four of those schools are part of the Islais Creek Watershed and their transformed campuses are part of the proposed larger network of linked places to eventually Frame the Islais Creek Watershed: (Junipero Serra ES & Junipero Serra CDC in Bernal; James Denman MS & San Miguel CDC in Excelsior; also, Gordon Lau ES & Commodore Stockton CDC in Chinatown).

If neighbors in the area, on Holly Park Circle or Murray Street, between HPC and Crescent are interested in a California native tree in front of their house, or if you would like to participate in helping to develop these initiatives, please contact: bonnieora@alivinglibrary.org

For more information view:  http:www.alivinglibrary.org http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/04/15/ED9C1CVBG2.DTL

Jun '11

Children’s Pictures & Writing From Bernal Heights Branch Living Library & Think Park Sites

Makayla For your enjoyment, please view a few photos and their descriptions, made by children participating this Spring in the Bernal Heights Living Library & Think Park sites at Junipero Serra Elementary School and Junipero Serra Child Development Center. We hope you like them !  The children wrote the captions for their photographs below: Natalie-Lava-1 Natalie-Lava-2

We put garlic and potatoes from the garden in our soup. We cut them really small. It tasted good! By: Natalie Lava

Makayla

My favorite thing I did in the garden was watch the butterflies and the bees pollinate the flowers. And after fruit will grow! By: Makayla

Owen

I liked making the soup because we got to pick Dinosaur kale By: Owen

Isaiah

I like to hunt for snails so they don’t mess up our garden.By: Isaiah

Victoria-and-Paola

Our favorite thing to do in the garden is hanging bird food. By: Victoria and Paola

Paola-and-Samantha-1

I like sucking the nectar out of the yellow flowers like the bees and the butterflies. By: Paola and Samantha

Melany

My favorite thing to do in the garden is watering. By: Melany

Aneesah

I like the flowers because they give us seeds. By: Aneesah

Johanna-Paniagua-Romero

I like to plant seeds and water plants because the roots get thirsty. By: Johanna Paniagua Romero

  Oscar

I love picking vegetables from the garden. By: Oscar

Kayla

We like to pull weeds because we like our garden healthy, nice, and full of pretty well grown flowers. Dandylions and grass are the most common weeds in the Junipero Serra garden. By: Kayla and Jesse

Sophia-Esmeralda-and-Jessica

We love to pull weed and eat apples in the garden. By: Sophia, Esmeralda, and Jessica

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