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Waite Park Community Council

1810 34th Ave NE
Minneapolis MN 55418
612-789-5104
A neighborhood in Northeast Minneapolis

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Waite Park Community Council

  • About
  • Programs
    • Security Rebate
    • Block Club Rebates
    • Home Improvement Loans
    • Community Garden
    • 2019 Community Survey
    • Anti-Racism Series
  • News
  • Meetings

Don't forget to care for your trees during the drought

July 29, 2021 Waite Park Community Council
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During our drought, remember that trees – especially young trees – need watering any time it doesn’t rain an inch in a week. Under the sprinkling restrictions, tree watering is allowed with a dripping hose, bucket or tree watering bag as needed.

Yard and boulevard trees need water

Minneapolis yard and boulevard trees need an inch of water every week all through the summer-fall season. Lack of water can make trees vulnerable to insects and disease and cause permanent damage to young and old trees alike. Trees up to five years old are especially susceptible. The Park Board plants and mulches boulevard trees but relies on residents or businesses nearby to water them.

An effective way to water a tree is to turn on a slow stream of water (just so the hose is weeping) for a few hours. Watering in the evening is most effective since it minimizes evaporation, and trees tend to take most of their water during the night. Watering one tree weekly costs only about $3 for 23 weeks – the entire summer-fall season. For people who lose track of when they last watered a tree, a good way to remember is to water trees on the same day trash is picked up.

Protect our Minneapolis quality of life

Taking care of our trees means protecting our Minneapolis quality of life. Healthy trees are beautiful, increase property values, help improve air quality, reduce greenhouse gases by absorbing carbon dioxide, save energy, keep the city cooler, provide homes for wildlife and help manage stormwater. If you have space in your yard to plant a tree, consider getting one going so it can get a start on providing shade and making a better quality of life in your neighborhood. The larger the tree, the larger the benefits.

For information on tree care and the urban forest, call the Park Board’s Forestry Department at 612-313-7710, email forestry@minneapolisparks.org or visit www.minneapolisparks.org/trees.

—via City of Minneapolis

In Sustainability Tags trees, drought

Join the citywide do-it-yourself Earth Day clean-up

April 13, 2021 Waite Park Community Council
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The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board along with the City of Minneapolis announce the annual Minneapolis Earth Day Clean-Up event has moved to DIY mode with supply pick up available at participating Earth Day sites, including Waite Park, on April 24 from 9:30 am-noon, near the playground off Garfield.

The Minneapolis Earth Day Clean-Up has been the city's largest community service project for many years. Since 2008, more than 20,000 residents have removed more than 160,000 pounds of garbage from Minneapolis parks, neighborhoods, and watersheds. 

You can participate anytime in April — while staying safe and preventing the spread of COVID-19.  By sharing photos of your cleanup, everyone will see what we can accomplish for the 2021 Earth Day. 

Residents are encouraged to participate by volunteering to help pick up trash in parks, neighborhoods, and watersheds. No registration needed, just follow these easy steps:

  1. Use a trash bag from home or pick up bags and gloves at participating Earth Day sites on April 24 from 9:30 am to noon.

  2. Head to a nearby park or trail to pick up trash (while getting fresh air and exercise).

  3. Practice social distancing and other current COVID-19 guidelines. Learn more at www.minneapolisparks.org/coronavirus-covid-19-information/

  4. Share photos of your trash haul on MPRB's @MPLSEarthDay Facebook page and

    using the hashtags #MplsDIYEarthDay and #WaiteParkMPLS

In Sustainability

How to participate in Waite Park’s 2021 raingarden program

April 10, 2021 Waite Park Community Council
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Update: This program is FULL for the 2021 season, but you may still contact Metro Blooms to be placed on a waitlist.

The Waite Park Community Council is again sponsoring a neighborhood raingarden program in partnership with Metro Blooms Design and Build. 

Twenty raingardens will be available on a first come first serve basis. 

If you are interested in having a raingarden installed on your property, contact Jennifer Moeller at Metro Blooms at (preferred) jmoeller@metroblooms.org or 612-367-6080 with your name, address, phone number and email address if you have one. Please reference Waite Park because several neighborhoods have raingarden programs. 

The community council uses funds from the City of Minneapolis to subsidize the cost of the consultations, designs, project oversight and installation, bringing the homeowner cost down to approximately $350-$400 per property.

Metro Blooms and the Conservation Corps of Minnesota expect to install the raingardens in early August, with consultations starting in late June.

In Sustainability
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