Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Ga. residents angered by crematorium construction

Zoning laws don't forbid construction of a crematorium, so one is on its way in a Georgia town

Sculpture gardens and more ... the Art of Dying

Some artists in the Seattle area are turning dying, or, more correctly, cemeteries, into an art form - building sculpture gardens and other art works in cemeteries.
This is a terrific article.

Native plants in cemeteries


Among the overlooked factors in the care and maintenance of today's contemporary cemetery is the problem of keeping those lawns green and those plants healthy.

As any self-educated lawn doctor will tell you, it can take a lot of fertilizer, pesticides, herbicides and water to make these final resting places look like "Amen Corner." All that added stuff adds stress to your plants, and all it does in the end is make the cycle more vicious.

One way to combat these problems is to become "au naturel." It's a small, but important step toward returning our cemeteries to the places of natural beauty that they once were, back during the establishment of the rural cemetery movement of the 19th century. Back then, cemeteries were established outside the crowded city limits and designed to draw the public for parks and other recreational activities and to give them the chance to experience nature up close.

How times have changed.

Some folks in California have the right idea. At the Old City Cemetery in Sacramento (picture of poppies, above), the native plant society has established a native plant garden to demonstrate the effectiveness of such greenery in attracting pollinators and other beneficial creatures. The primary goal of the project is to demonstrate how home gardeners can utilize native plants, but another consequence - intended or unintended, we don't care - is to beautify a long-neglected cemetery.

Natives "know the language," so to speak; they are less prone to the cyclical climate changes that can hurt exotics and other non-natives introduced into cemeteries. And, in this day of concerns over water supplies, natives need less water to survive, because they are in their normal habitat.

Similar things are going on all over the country - as we'll attempt to point out here. Another quick find was the Mulkey Cemetery in Eugene, Oregon, which is among a growing number of cemeteries offering "green-burial" option, right down to the native plants that surround your loved one's final resting place.

Early Philadelphia cemetery

NPR has a nice, little feature story about a cemetery in Philadelphia's Fishtown section. It's most famous resident is an American Revolution hero.
While surfing the Web on this cemetery, I came across this article from the Philadelphia Weekly.

Another subject: Thieves target metal at cemeteries

And another story different from what we usually post, but another alarming trend: Thieves are stealing metal from cemeteries, anything from bronze mausoleum doors to metal joint-replacement parts. For real.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Where Cub fans go to die

Not usually the type of thing we put here at WPTG, but this is too good to resist. A cemetery in Chicago is building a replica of Wrigley Field's centerfield wall as Cub fans' final resting place.
Among the clever nicknames for it: "eternal season ticket."

Thursday, July 10, 2008

More news from Conn., this time from preservationists

A nice story about a group in East Hartford that works to restore and preserve a historic cemetery.

Conn. town seeks cemetery site, committee members

The town government in Weston, Conn., is looking for a place to create a new cemetery. The prior board of selectmen paid $10,000 to conduct a study, and came up with potential locations, but no action has been taken, and now the government wants to start over with a new cemetery committee to look into the matter.
This story is quite comprehensive, detailing some of the land-use and geological problems with locating a cemetery.