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#vermont

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The surprising shifts #ClimateChange is bringing to #Vermont #farms: #RicePaddies, #peaches, #saffron

By Maeve Fairfax
Jun 26, 2025

TOWNS STATEWIDE — "Vermont’s farmers are growing crops that better suit the state’s warmer and wetter climate — and branching into products that provide income even when traditional crops fail.

"Since 1900, annual temperatures in Vermont have increased by about 2 degrees Fahrenheit, and annual precipitation has increased by 21% over the same span, according to the state. The changes have forced agriculture to adapt in sometimes surprising ways.

"Now that winters are milder, it has become commonplace for Vermont orchards to grow peaches. Nick Cowles owns Shelburne Orchards, and 35 years ago, he saw a bedraggled peach tree at a hardware store and bought it on a whim. Since then — especially in more recent years — peaches have become a lucrative addition to his business.

"Peach trees like rain, and so the increased precipitation in Vermont does not bother them. Historically, temperatures posed a problem for peach-growing.

" 'It takes around 15-17 degrees below zero in the winter to kill the bud, and it used to be that there would be a stretch in the winter that we would get those temperatures. I figured we would get a peach crop maybe every third year,' Cowles said.

"Now, he said, 'it’s rare that they freeze out.'

"Innovation is also making Vermont a more peach-friendly place.

"Farmers have used new technology to develop more cold-hardy peach varieties, Cowles said, and he now has trees that ripen at different times so that the picking lasts longer and brings in more customers.

"In Ferrisburgh, Erik Andrus has turned his hayfields into rice paddies.

"His Boundbrook Farm uses the rice-and-duck farming technique, a pesticide-free method in which ducklings are released into rice paddies. They control weeds and pests — and provide fertilizer.

"The farm mostly grows cold-tolerant rice varieties from Japan, which sits at a similar latitude to Vermont, but has recently started to grow loto rice from Italy.

"The farm once accidentally planted Koshihikari, a variety of Japanese rice poorly suited to the cold. It did eventually mature, but not until October, which Andrus said was 'a little bit of a nailbiter.'

"Floods and droughts appear to be striking Vermont more frequently, but the rice grown at Boundbrook Farm is fairly immune to both, Andrus said.

"The plants can be underwater for two days without being harmed, and the grains are protected by a husk that means they won’t be contaminated by pollution from floodwaters. Because the varieties can be planted in floodplains, they can get water even during droughts.

"Andrus said 'flood-prone bottomlands' are the best places to create rice paddies. Vermont has many such areas, and rice could represent a path forward for farms impacted by flooding.

"He works as a consultant at Cornell University, where a team of researchers is studying rice-farming techniques in the Hudson Valley. They are also offering workshops and creating resources for farmers.

"But nothing like that exists in Vermont, and acquiring the tools, seeds and knowledge to create and manage a rice paddy without help is unrealistic for most farmers here.

"Andy Jones, the manager of Burlington’s Intervale Community Farm, said it has become easier to grow crops that like it warm: peppers, eggplants, melons, sweet potatoes.

"The member-owned farm has also seen increased yields of cold-weather spinach, lettuce and kale grown in unheated greenhouses in the winter. The flip side is that, for several weeks in the summer, the farm has had to stop growing some of those crops because it gets too hot."

Read more:
vtcommunitynews.org/2025/06/26

Community News Service · The surprising shifts climate change is bringing to Vermont farms: rice paddies, peaches, saffron - Community News ServiceSince 1900, annual temperatures in Vermont have increased by about 2 degrees Fahrenheit, and annual precipitation has increased by 21% over the same span, according to the state.

Watercolor & ink urban sketch - 8/7/25

Built in 1875 originally as a Unitarian church and then de-consecrated in 1970, this is now the "Stone Church", a music venue at 210 Main Street in Brattleboro that brings in some heavy-hitting acts to this small town.

In the 1970s my mother co-owned an oriental rug store based here and I remember crawling around stacks of rugs as a kid. Good times.

(6.25 x 4.5 in, 15.8 x 11.4 cm)

Continued thread

@rabble also talks about Front Porch Forum;

"...a free community-building service in Vermont and parts of New York. Your neighborhood's forum is only open to the people who live there. It's all about helping neighbors connect.

frontporchforum.com/

He says it circulates posts within a small local area, moderating them before delivery, and delivering approved posts 24 hours after they're sent. This is brilliant!

It's like #Neighbourly but run by a not-for-profit.

frontporchforum.comJoin Front Porch ForumConnect with neighbors and build community

On the off-chance that there are Brattleboro Mastodonners following me, there will be a fundraiser this evening at Lilac Ridge tonight (8/6/25) from 5-7, plus a live broadcast on wvew.org (107.7 FM). I'll be there helping out.

Creemees! Soul Food! Live Music! Pick your own flowers!

What a combo...

Watercolor and ink urban sketching - 8/5/25
(4/16)

25% of the way to my goal of one plein-air sketch a day.

The Stockwell Building in West Brat. built in 1893 in the Queen Anne style. This was a general store for over 100 years, I remember giant wooden letters spelling out "STOCKWELL" above the windows, sadly gone.

Today it houses a Chinese restaurant and apartments.

(8.25 x 5.25 in, 209 x 139 mm)

I'm just going to go ahead and say it: if you drive a Ford Explorer with tinted windows, GFYS. Sell that shit, so I don't shoot you by accident, thinking you're a Gestapo agent.

Every. Fucking. Time. I see one now... 🤬

And I'm not just being paranoid, they're using #Vermont in general and my town in particular cuz they think we're red.

Don't cry when they start getting flat tires or going up in flames. I warned y'all.

A literal 🐐!!

"Schlott has taken old pay phones, modified them to make free calls, and set them up in three different towns across the county. He buys the phones secondhand from sites like eBay and Craigslist and restores them in his home workshop.

With just an internet connection, these phones can make calls anywhere in the U.S. or Canada — no coins required. And Schlott covers all the operating costs himself."

"He says the phones have come in handy for drivers whose cars have broken down nearby. And at a public library in Thetford Center — the most used installation by far — kids have been able to call their parents for rides home or simply to check in."

npr.org/2025/08/04/nx-s1-54840

#npr#vermont#tech

#Wildfire smoke is like #smoking 'half a pack a day.'

#Smoke from Canadian #wildfires continued to prompt #AirQuality alerts Monday in the #Northeast #US as well as the Upper #Midwest.

#Michigan saw a statewide #air quality advisory on Monday, & while #Minnesota is seeing some relief, the #WildfireSmoke is persisting in #Wisconsin, & spreading across #NewYork, #Vermont, & #Maine.

#climate #ClimateCrisis #PublicHealth
npr.org/2025/08/04/nx-s1-54924