Environmental Stewardship and Education

We will lead with education and action to protect nature for future generations.

But have you also heard of the Lookout Mountain Conservancy? Or the Southeastern Grasslands Institute?

Or Tennessee River Gorge Trust? It’s a regional nonprofit that, several years ago, created a most special experience. 

Endangered Red Wolf - Chattanooga - Reflection Riding

The Tennessee River Gorge Trust (TRGT) story begins in Guatemala and ends here, in the Tennessee Valley, one of the most ecologically diverse places in the US and home to gorgeous and rare creatures, like the gray bat, red wolf and snail darter.

And two migratory birds: the worm-eating Warbler and Louisiana Waterthrush.

In the winter, both birds nest in central Guatemala. As the weather shifts, they fly 2000 miles across to Chattanooga. 

We have volunteer and nonprofit groups devoted to preserving and promoting all of this. Last summer, one group built a 200-acre mountain bike multi-use trail system on the side of a mountain. Another group cut the ribbon on a 34-mile river-to-cloud connector trail on Lookout Mountain – or Tsatanugi – from the city streets below.

Not long ago, officials were meeting in Montague Park with plans for restoration and renovation. The park is situated among a large immigrant population and that day, some Guatemalans were in attendance as Parks Director Scott Martin stood to speak. 

Then, birdsong.

It was a worm-eating Warbler.

“I’m home,” one woman said, nearby. “Estoy en casa.”

The woman had immigrated to Chattanooga from Guatemala. The bird – a reinita gusanera – had flown here from Guatemala, too. Both woman and bird had made similar journeys; in the birdsong, she recognized home. 

“Home moved for her. Home had landed here,” Scott Martin said. “In this global world, the ability to feel at home is pretty important.”

Montague Sculpture Fields - Chattanooga

In 2018, the city of Chattanooga formed a pioneering Natural Resources team, Including a field team focusing on green infrastructure.

This idea started among passionate, proactive city staffers who care about land management. 

Emerging from this? No-mow medians. Grassland restoration. Pollinator and understory gardens. Pesticide alternative. Goats and sheep as invasive species control. A $6 million USDA grant for increasing tree canopy and tree planting. The city's newly adopted resolution for Environment Excellence.

It begins with education. Throughout Hamilton County, there are teachers and classrooms orienting towards ecology, sustainability and fun. Administrators build outdoor classrooms, once necessary during Covid, now gleefully populated. As teachers shift lesson plans outside, students respond with increased joy and attention. At the Wauhatchie Forest School, young children are taught that nature is the classroom.

Nature School in Chattanooga

Not long ago, Boyd Buchanan became the first private school in Tennessee to offer a Future Farmers of America program; it’s reportedly the most popular program at the school, with a wait list and more FFA students receiving college scholarships than through athletics. With LEED-certified buildings and a strong emphasis on sustainability, Baylor School also maintains a beautiful and promising gardening program.

Earlier this summer, an ecologist with the Southeastern Grasslands Institute (SGI) offered a public tour of Heritage Park where, a few years ago, SGI began seeding native species in an attempt to naturally regenerate plant life. 

Today, at least 76 native plants and many animals are thriving in this richly biodiverse half-acre grassland in the heart of the city. 

Heritage Park Meadow

Our Environmental 
Stewardship and Education 
Partners

Partner Spotlight

We have champions across the city: nonprofits, families, public and private leaders, gutsy, DIY individuals who start working, come hell or high water.

Reflection Riding Arboretum and Nature Center

Has a mission to restore “the vital connection between people and nature.” Believing that “everyone should have the opportunity to experience nature,” Reflection Riding – a 300-acre nature center just 10 minutes from downtown – offers a marvelous variety of educational and experiential opportunities – like guided hikes or animal encounters with red wolves, bobcats, bald eagles – for all Chattanoogans.

Read More About Our Efforts

November 21, 2024

Chattanooga’s Environmental Stewardship & Education

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What if every regional student in school learned the difference between post oaks and pin oaks?

What if we celebrated bird migration season with a festival in the day and street lights dimmed at night?

What if we conserved 500 acres for nature in our urban core?

What if we populated our yards, parks and roadways with species that support life?