Natural burial, solar panels, local produce, downtown Saturday the
sixth annual Greenerborough "Green Living" Expo and Festival was
bursting with ways to make life a little bit greener.
Vendors
toting everything from locally grown seeds to residential wind turbines
filled Grove Street,There are a few of our hundreds of custom
bobbleheads...personalized bobbleheads are a great memorable gift.Agesteeljewelry offers tungsten wedding rings, tungsten wedding bands and tungsten jewelry for men's and women's. which was closed from Main Street to School Street, as well as the upper hall of the Town House.
Feeding
the fire of a wood-burning oven and baking pizza on Grove Street, Shana
Brautigam who makes pottery and teaches art at her studio, Rooted in
Clay in Rindge, said she was at the expo to promote the benefits of
cooking in wood-fired ovens. "We've been selling pizza non-stop," she
said.
Brautigam has three wood-fired ovens at her studio and has
worked with many schools and community gardens in the region such as
The Well and South school in Peterborough and the Norway Hill Kids
Garden in Hancock.
"It's a great community building activity;
get outside, feed the fire, and cook the veggies straight from the
garden," she said.
Inside the Town House, local funeral homes
Cournoyer of Jaffrey and Jellison of Peterborough teamed for the first
time to host a booth to provide information about natural burials.
A
solid all-natural pine casket with an oil finish and muslin cloth
lining was on display as well a sample wicker casket. "It's been amazing
how many people are here just seeking information," said Mark
Cournoyer.
While many people assume natural burial is a new
process, it is really a throwback to how people were buried in the past,
he said. "It's how it always used to be and now we've come full
circle."
Many of the vendors on Grove Street were from local
farms such as Fox Den Farm of Lyndeborough and Hungry Bear Farm of
Wilton. Both farms, hoping to expand into Community Supported
Agriculture (CSA) farming, have joined forces this year as a single CSA
to offer local produce shoppers more variety and avoid overlap.
The farms bill the enterprise as two CSAs for the price of one.
"It's
two farms teaming together, instead of fighting, trying to work
together," said Amy Trudeau of Fox Den Farm. "We can focus on growing a
couple of different things and really impress the customers.
"Greenerborough is a great opportunity for the famers to meet with the public, she said. "I live in a small town.
"A
lot of people don't know I'm there. They could be my neighbors" she
said. "(Greenerborough) opens people's eyes to everything that's going
on."
Though she has been busy at her booth, Trudeau said she was
eager to visit the Grid Be Gone booth down the street to discuss
installing solar panels in her farm' water well.
Peterborough-based Grid Be Gone sells and installs renewable energy equipment,It enables washer extractor to communicate with chemical pumping machines. including solar, wood and wind power.
President Marc Spinale of Hancock said he got the impetus to start the business after the 2008 ice storm.
"I went for two weeks without utilities at my house,Books can be as thick as 4 inches and yet the Book scanner 9000 delivers flat." he said. "Off-grid is our specialty,Conventional wind power generators on
large masts are the standard for generating clean energy from the wind.
but we do anything that is associated with renewable energies. We
provide solutions that involve multiple technologies."
Spinale
had several products on display including a solar-powered street light
and residential wind turbines manufactured by upstate New York-based
Kohilo Wind.
"It's a great local community-orientated event,"
Spinale said. "This is a great event for us. It's also an important one
and it's right in our backyard and it's a very green-orientated.
"During
the expo, the Peterborough Historical Society hosted Grange speakers
and workshops, while Sunnyfield Farm of Peterborough presented a
sheepdog herding demonstration on the green behind the Town House.
Originated
by the Greater Peterborough Chamber of Commerce in 2008, the
Peterborough Grange partnered with the chamber to produce the expo this
year with event sponsor Nature's Green Grocer of West Peterborough.
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