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 COURIER L 22     IFE, AUGUST 6-12, 2021 
 Paw’some! 
 Greenwood Heights dog owners  
 pitch in to improve local dog park 
 BY JESSICA PARKS 
 A cadre of canine owners in Greenwood  
 Heights are rolling up their  
 sleeves to help fi x their beloved local  
 dog park — raising thousands of dollars  
 to improve the stomping ground  
 for their furry friends. 
 “The dog park has been really important  
 to our community,” said Adam  
 Maynard,  who  spearheading  the  dog  
 park improvements with Evan Saucier, 
   “and  if we want  to  keep  it  a  safe  
 place for us and our dogs we have to  
 put the work in.”  
 The South Slope Dog Run on 18th  
 Street between Sixth and Seventh avenues  
 is prone to dust storms, fl ooding  
 from poor drainage and  litter  from  the  
 excavation of the Prospect Expressway  
 in the mid-1900s, neighbors said, with  
 some worrying about the effects the dust  
 might have on their furry companions. 
 “I get nervous about bringing Okie  
 because there is dirt blowing in the  
 wind constantly,” said Laura Murray.  
 “I just know that is getting in her lungs  
 but I don’t have any other option.” 
 But the Fido-friendly space — which  
 was created in 2010 — is the only dog  
 park in the neighborhood, and, just  
 like many city dwellers, the local canine  
 corral served as a sanctuary  for  
 them and their furry friends during  
 the pandemic, the volunteers said. 
 “We call it the Dust Bowl, and you  
 know it’s the only place nearby and  
 it’s such a dog-centric neighborhood,”  
 Murray said. “It’s New York City, we  
 live in tiny apartments and its very  
 important for our dogs to socialize”  
 Now, they’ve taken it upon themselves  
 to maintain the dog park, this  
 time  raising  $2,000  in  just  24  hours  to  
 buy topsoil to protect the trees, as well  
 as bark mulch later down the road. “I am  
 just really happy that people in the community  
 and dog owners were quick and  
 very generous to pitch in,” said Saucier.  
 Though some issues arose with the  
 bark  mulch,  which  they  said  would  
 help solve the park’s drainage issue, a  
 group pitched in early Thursday, joined  
 by their doggos, to spread the soil and  
 even construct a makeshift gutter. 
 “We are working on getting mulch  
 or wood chips to cover the surface,  
 to keep  the dust down,” Saucier  said.  
 “The mulch and the topsoil will help  
 stop the pooling of water. We are also  
 going  to have  to make sure  the water  
 is  able  to  cascade  down,  so  we  jerry  
 rigged irrigation ditches.”  
 The new soil will help fortify the  
 run’s three remaining living trees,  
 which help provide the only shade in the  
 park, along with one dead tree which locals  
 have called on the city to cut down.  
 “We wanted to protect our existing  
 Volunteers’  canine  companions,  pictured  
 here R2, doggedly supervised the clean up. 
   Photo by Jessica Parks 
 trees,” Saucier said. “One is dead, and  
 we haven’t been able to get the city to  
 cut it down — and even then, replacing  
 it would be just a sapling, which  
 wouldn’t produce shade. We basically  
 need to protect the ones we have or we  
 are going to be out of luck.”  
 The  crew  of  do-gooders  said  they  
 choose to do these little fi xes instead of  
 applying for an overhaul from the Parks  
 Department  as  they  don’t  want  to  see  
 the park closed for a year-plus due to the  
 infamously slow city bureaucracy. 
 “We don’t want to shut this down  
 while  they  make  the  improvements,”  
 said Adam Maynard, who spearheaded  
 the initiative, “so I feel like over time  
 we could do it, just projects over time  
 to maintain it.”  
 Mostly everything in the dog run  
 has been maintained, donated, or built  
 by caring dog owners who want to  
 make the brown space better for everyone, 
  especially for the neighborhood’s  
 four-legged companions.  
 “Everything that you see here, including  
 the picnic benches, was done  
 by volunteers,” Maynard said.  
 In addition  to  the bark mulch,  the  
 group of volunteers plans to keep  
 working to enhance the dog run, and  
 have asked  the  city  to work on planting  
 new trees and adding a waterline  
 for the dogs to have drinking water,  
 Maynard told Brooklyn Paper.  
 One neighbor lending a hand said  
 she thinks more people have taken notice  
 of the needs of their dog run after  
 the pandemic highlighted the importance  
 of it in the community.  
 “During  COVID,  this  became  a  
 really  supportive,  social  spot,”  said  
 Patty Onderko. “It was nice to have a  
 close-by place where everyone could  
 hang out and enjoy our dogs.”  
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