Community Corner

Environmental Pledge, Art Kick Off Travel And Tourism Week

Annapolis and Anne Arundel County officials kicked off National Travel and Tourism Week with a pledge to the environment.

ANNAPOLIS, MD — Visit Annapolis & Anne Arundel County, the City of Annapolis and local environmental group Annapolis Green teamed up Saturday to kick off National Travel and Tourism Week with a host of activities designed to promote enhanced environment stewardship throughout Annapolis and Anne Arundel County.

In keeping with this year’s theme, “Travel Then and Now,” VAAAC, the City of Annapolis and Annapolis Green are focusing on remembering the “then” of the Chesapeake Bay that explorer John Smith experienced in 1608, and they’re working to ensure that the “now” and future course of the Chesapeake Bay is a return to the pristine ecological treasure Smith praised in his journal with the words, “Heaven and earth never agreed better to frame a place for man’s habitation,” the group's said in a news release.

The day began with #CleanYOURblock efforts as part of Keep America Beautiful’s nationwide “Great American Cleanup.” Volunteers reported to four designated areas of the city for the cleanups. In addition, all interested individuals were invited to spearhead simultaneous efforts in their neighborhoods.

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Following the cleanups, the celebration continued with an open house and refreshments at the 26 West Street Visitors Center. Festivities included the dedication of a recently installed Elkay permanent water refill station that’s designed to reduce the use of single-use plastic bottles. Annapolis Green co-founder Lynne Forsman used the occasion to officially announce her organization’s launch of a “Refill Revolution” designed to educate consumers to the ease, convenience and environmental friendliness of using refillable cups and containers.

The highlight of the day was Annapolis Mayor Gavin Buckley’s dedication of an 8-foot high blue heron sculpture soon to be permanently installed behind the Visitors Center. The custom designed, handcrafted metal sculpture depicts an 8-foot-long blue heron with an 8.5-foot wingspan. Created by Jim Swaim of the North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina company Environmental Sculptures, the blue heron is designed to be filled with picked-up trash – as a way of encouraging passersby to pick up after themselves. Debris from the morning cleanups was the first trash inserted into the sculpture.

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Swaim told the crowd his creation is designed to disturb people. He wants individuals to realize that litter and unrecycled trash ends up in waterways and in the bodies of marine life. Swaim has created a similar sculpture – a blue crab – that resides at the Annapolis Maritime Museum’s McNasby campus in Eastport. Another one of his creations – a sea turtle – debuted at the sixth annual International Marine Debris Conference in San Diego in March. It’s now on permanent display at the Living Coast Discovery Center in San Diego.


Photos: Visit Annapolis & Anne Arundel County teamed up with Annapolis Green to kick off National Travel and Tourism Week on May 5 with a host of activities designed to promote enhanced environmental stewardship throughout Annapolis and Anne Arundel County. Pictured from left: Rich Barbieri, the Joyce Agency; Abid Khaleel, Elkay Manufacturing Company; Lynne Forsman, Annapolis Green; Elvia Thompson, Annapolis Green; Frank DiVenti, Visit Annapolis & Anne Arundel County; Jim Swaim, Environmental Sculptures; Helen Lowman, Keep America Beautiful; and Annapolis Mayor Gavin Buckley.

Photo: Annapolis Mayor Gavin Buckley is the first to insert trash into a Blue Heron environmental sculpture that was dedicated during Visit Annapolis and Anne Arundel County’s May 5 kickoff of National Travel and Tourism Week. Pictured from left: Annapolis Mayor Gavin Buckley; Helen Lowman, Keep America Beautiful; Tatiana Wells, Visit Annapolis & Anne Arundel County; Frank DiVenti, Visit Annapolis & Anne Arundel County; and Jim Swaim, Environmental Sculptures.

Photos courtesy of Visit Annapolis & Anne Arundel County

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