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Volunteers will spend the summer clearing brush, weeds and debris from the nursery. Plans call for about 20,000 trees to be planted there in the next five years, said Jill Katakowski, the organization's operations manager for the nursery. That will allow the group to use 3,000 to 5,000 trees a year from the nursery instead of buying them from commercial nurseries. For Greening of Detroit, which marks its 20th anniversary this fall, the nursery project is just one piece of the planting efforts. From its offices about a block east of the remnants of Tiger Stadium, about two dozen staff coordinate streetside tree plantings and community gardens on vacant lots. A garden is being planned at Eastern Market to show the prospects for small-scale farms in the city, and hundreds of schoolchildren participate in the group's environmental education projects. Crews also are preparing a stretch of one of the city's main thoroughfares for about 530 trees. The roadway once was shaded by tall trees but now has many empty spots. "We want those trees not to just survive," Bairley said, "but thrive and jump out of those holes at us so that they will be able to form the kind canopy we need to cover six straight lanes of traffic." ___ On the Net: Greening of Detroit: http://www.greeningofdetroit.com/
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