Las Vegas community creates a garden to mourn and heal

A plot of land slated to be a dog park has now been turned into a community garden, thanks to more than 1,000 volunteers who wanted to create a place where their Las Vegas community could honor and remember those who lost their lives in the mass shooting.

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John Locher/AP
A woman writes a note on the newly created Las Vegas Community Healing Garden on Oct. 16, 2017, in Las Vegas. The garden serves as both a memorial for those lost in the mass shooting and a place for the community to begin to heal.

The day after a gunman opened fire on a country music festival from a high-rise Las Vegas hotel, a local landscaper was at City Hall with an idea for remembering the 58 people killed in the deadliest shooting in modern US history.

Jay Pleggenkuhle of Stonerose Landscapes said he thought the people of Las Vegas needed a project to help them work through their grief.

His business partner, Daniel Perez, pushed him to tell city officials about the idea for a temporary "pop up" garden where people could mourn. Officials identified a quarter-acre city lot in the downtown arts district originally slated for a dog park and suggested the garden be made permanent.

With city approval, the land and a plan drawn on a paper napkin, the landscaping team asked their contractor friend Mark Hammelmann for help.

More than 1,000 volunteers joined in.

Over the next three days, the dirt lot was leveled, concrete bricks placed and a heart-shaped garden was filled with purple pansies, red and white roses, and bright pink petunias. A temporary "Remembrance Wall" was hammered together from wooden pallets. Trees and shrubs were planted. Neighbor John Pacheco, a local artist now dubbed the "garden mayor," served coffee to volunteers.

"Who would have thought this was Sin City?" Mr. Pleggenkuhle said. "Despite the reputation, the community spirit has always been here."

Around the city, local businesses have offered cremations for those who died, spaghetti dinners, and 30-minute massages for first responders who rushed to the shooting scene, all at no cost. A dentist's office said it would provide free treatment for dental injuries sustained in the attack. A plastic surgery practice announced free wound care and scar therapy for disfiguring injuries. St. Rose Dominican Hospitals, which treated 71 victims across three campuses, has said it will not require payment from any patient victims of the attack. Many mental health clinics provided trauma counseling without charge.

The Uber ride-sharing service is still providing free rides to anyone who travels to and from hospitals or blood banks, local driver Sheryl Hyatt said. She visited the garden Sunday to look for the photograph of Sonny Melton, a registered nurse from Big Sandy, Tennessee, who died in the shooting.

"There he is," she said, pointing at his smiling image attached to the wall.

Ms. Hyatt said she had driven him and his wife, Heather, from the airport when they arrived for the music festival and remembered him because of his big personality.

"He was a real hoot," she said, "the kind of guy you don't forget."

Organizers of the garden said it is those happy memories they hope will emerge among visitors, along with a sense of community and connection.

Two weeks after the massacre, scores of people come each day to the garden where a pair of cowboy boots, a skateboard, and other victims' belongings are displayed.

They gaze at smiling photographs of the victims and written messages from their loved ones.

"I Love You Wifey."

"I Love You Mommy."

Visitors have included a rabbi who drove from Caspar, Wyo., and a family who flew in from Washington, D.C., Pleggenkuhle said.

"I had always thought of Las Vegas as a place of transients from California or Phoenix or cold places like Minnesota," said Shirl McMayon, a horticulturist and botanist recruited to help with the garden. "I would never have thought that people here would come together like this as a community."

Las Vegas magicians Siegfried and Roy donated a $10,000 oak to serve as a "tree of life" representing the people still alive, Ms. McMayon said. Nurseries donated other plants, including 58 tupelo trees, each one representing a person lost in the attack. Volunteers built the wall, laid the brick, and planted grass for several small lawns.

"We don't have a flashy volcano or dancing water." Pleggenkuhle said. "It's not the prettiest garden you'll see. But it has a real heart and soul to it, and it is bringing a lot of healing."

This story was reported by The Associated Press.

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