Quite a lot, actually.
As has been illustrated in a number of ways in recent years, people in this city really love their parks, their open spaces, their beaches, their urban gardens and their urban forests.
The city is sort of laid out to feed that passion. Wherever you are in the city, a park, playground, conservation area or pond is not far.
Residents agree that they love the city s open spaces but don t always share the same vision for the future of those spaces.
It s a balancing act, and in those situations, it helps to have a guiding document to lead the way forward.
Robert-antonelli
Stevenh-foskett-jr
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Coes Pond in Worcester to be treated for weeds; no swimming, says Department of Public Works & Parks
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Coes-pondகொஎஸ்-பாஂட்WORCESTER The city’s beloved and belittled “Turtle Boy” better think twice next time it wants to tussle with an unsuspecting tortoise from behind because, after a 30-year hibernation, “Snapper” has popped its ugly, hungry head out of its mutated shell.
A true Worcester creation, “Snapper” refers to both an unfinished independent film project about a shell-encrusted killer reptile on a feeding frenzy at Coes Pond (renamed Lost Lake ) and the subject of a new short-film documentary, “Snapper: The Man-Eating Turtle Movie That Never Got Made,” by Providence-based filmmaker John Campopiano.
“Snapper: The Man-Eating Turtle Movie That Never Got Made” is being screened Friday through next Thursday in the Coolidge Corner Theatre s Virtual Screening Room in Brookline.
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