Going back to our very beginnings of this blog which has grown to become so much to so many is always the most satisfying experience. If you remember, we began with only a GoPro camera and and this free Blogger program from Google because it was all we could afford. We really didn't even have a proper direction at first until we realized through Andrea Rosema and her gang of merry makers that we could build and grow people by simply giving them a platform. It seems to have worked.
It's still an honor beyond imagination when we find groups that are taking the bull by the horns to meet challenges that their neighborhoods are faced with. We have found challenges in every corner of the county. While they might be unique to a neighborhood depending on the location, they are common in the fact that we all share issues and concerns and it's in the knowledge of what's happening here or there that we can build and grow as a community. So where you might not think that what's happening in Norton Shores has no effect on what's going on in Egelston, it's simply the furthest thing from the truth. We are all unique to our neighborhoods, but we are one when it comes to Muskegon. We have a lot to be proud of as one. So, with that reflection let's move on to todays' story.
Join Our Parks on Facebook |
The Our Parks Initiative in Muskegon is a group coming together to improve the grounds and the experiences of our kids in what's offered in the parks with both equipment and programming. It's a project that's been in the works for a couple years on the East side of town and of course, like everything everywhere when the pandemic hit, it got slowed way down but never went away because of the beliefs of the people organizing it and the purpose in which they are working to improve the quality of life for younger people and families who want to utilize the parks. It's not only their purpose to beautify and improve the parks, but to help bring back some of the togetherness that they remember as a kid when everything seemed to circle around the park, the ball game and the friends and neighbors all keeping up with one another. As we've grown into an age where anyone can be face to face digitally, it's truly needed for people to come together and talk minus the ability to communicate through a keyboard and harkening back to a simpler time once in a while...well, there's an awful lot of good that can come of that for kids along with all the modern conveniences.
There's been some fundraising going on. Real boots on the ground stuff. Can drives, some business have contributed to the beginnings of things. A group of volunteers are handling the work as it comes and trying to recruit others. One area where the modern things meet the traditional sense of neighborhood togetherness is working in tandem well is the use of social media. The Our Parks Initiative has been very good at recruiting through Facebook and as awareness grows, so too will the efforts. While focused on the East side of things in town now, they hope one day too to be able to extend that into other areas that need help and where they find people who don't mind getting a little dirty in the renovation of a park that adds so much to their neighborhood.
I met up with the group organizer Pete Mosher and one of his committee members Darcie Pace at the Dog House Saloon on their patio to learn a little more about the work and purpose, take a listen.
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