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| LOCAL NEWS |
OP/Ed piece
Gazette 6/24/08 |
Adapted from remarks made at the 43th Annual Meeting of the board and membership of the Vineyard Conservation Society, 24 June 2008
Visitors to Martha’s Vineyard often observe that much of the Island appears to be wonderfully open and undeveloped. It is an accurate observation, but it is also an illusion of sorts. While a century of land conservation work has resulted in permanent protection of about one-third of the Island’s 60,000 acres, another one-third is undeveloped land with no conservation protection of any kind. Until a conservation entity buys it, or a landowner voluntarily cedes development rights, it is at risk of being developed.
Go to Sustainable section for the rest of the talk |
| Feature |
Ga. judge halts construction of coal-fired plant
By GREG BLUESTEIN
Associated Press Writer |
The construction of a coal-fired power plant in Georgia was halted Monday when a judge ruled that the plant's builders must first obtain a permit from state regulators that limits the amount of carbon dioxide emissions.
Fulton County Judge Thelma Wyatt Cummings Moore's decision overturned a ruling that allowed the construction of the $2 billion Longleaf Energy Plant, which would become Georgia's first new coal-fired plant in more than two decades.
Environmentalists said the decision marks the first time that a judge has applied a U.S. Supreme Court finding that carbon dioxide is a pollutant to emissions from an industrial source.
http://www.charlotte.com/
204/story/693402.html
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Compost-It Notes
So you say you want to join the ever -growing,ever greening ranks of composters.First,we advise taking a look at the vast range of compost options available at a web site: www.composters.com
Food composters run the gamut from a glorified bucket with holes to a hard plastic capsule on a spit.
Wake Up And Smell The Planet
Grist guide to greening your day
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| Calendar |
| Nature Tours with The Trustees of Reservations on Chappaquiddick |
Mon, July 7, Nature Tours with The Trustees of Reservations on Chappaquiddick are offered daily, including Fishing Discovery tours, Cape Pogue Natural History, Lighthouse or Quest tours. For details and reservations, call 508-627-3599.
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| Guided Kayak Tour begins at Felix Neck |
Mon, July 7, Guided Kayak Tour begins at Felix Neck at 10 a.m. for ages 11 and up with an adult. Cost is $35 or $28 for Mass Audubon members. Registration required; call 508-627-4850. |
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| Kayak Quest of Sengekontacket |
Mon, July 7, Kayak Quest of Sengekontacket, a self-guided tour offered weekdays with Felix Neck Wildlife Sanctuary in Edgartown. Times vary. Cost is $40, $30 for Mass Audubon members, equipment included. Call to reserve: 508-627-4850. |
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| Bird Walk with Susan Whiting |
Tues, July 8, Bird Walk with Susan Whiting every Tuesday from 8 to 11 a.m. meets at the Chilmark Community Center. Cost is $10 per person, free for center members. For details, call 508-645-9484. |
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| Creature Feature: Fireflies |
Tues, July 8, Creature Feature: Fireflies kid's program includes story, craft, and live creatures from 10 to 11 a.m. at Felix Neck Wildlife Sanctuary for ages 3 to 5 with a parent or friend. Cost is $9, $6 for members. For details, call 508-627-4850. |
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| Explore the Shore Family Snorkel at Cape Pogue Wildlife Refuge |
Tues, July 8, Explore the Shore Family Snorkel at Cape Pogue Wildlife Refuge on Chappy. The Trustees of Reservations Times vary. Cost is $10 per child; guardians free. Transport available. For details, call 508-627-3599. |
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| Marine Discovery Tour of Oak Bluffs Harbor |
Tues, July 8, Marine Discovery Tour of Oak Bluffs Harbor with Felix Neck in a Coast Guard boat, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Also Thursdays. For ages 4 and up. Cost is $40, $30 for Mass Audubon members, $4 for children 8 and under. Registration required, call 508-627-4850. |
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| Night Hike for Families |
Tues, July 8, Night Hike for Families with children ages four through eight from 8 to 9:15 p.m. at the Cape Pogue Wildlife Refuge on Chappy. Cost is $10 per child; guardian is free. Transport from Chappy ferry available. Preregistration required; call 508-627-3599. |
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| Mytoi Volunteer Day |
Wed, July 9, Mytoi Volunteer Day from 9 a.m to noon at Chappaquiddick Japanese-style garden. Prune, weed, and help maintain this Trustees of Reservations property. If you plan to attend, please call 508-627-3599. |
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| Wild Wednesday kids' nature program |
Wed, July 9, Wild Wednesday kids' nature program from 10 to 11 a.m. at Felix Neck Wildlife Sanctuary in Edgartown. Cost is $9, $6 for members and free for ages three and under. For details, call 508-627-4850. Down By The Shore: an outdoor nature program for adults and children begins at 1 p.m at Felix Neck Wildlife Sanctuary in Edgartown. Also Thursdays at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Cost is $9, $6 for Mass Audubon members. Children under 3 free. For details call 508-627-4850.and culture and discover subtleties hidden in the museum. Also open for guided house tours until 3 p.m. with $7 suggested donation for adults, $4 for children. |
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| Observing and Drawing the Landscape |
Wed, July 9, Observing and Drawing the Landscape, an art workshop from 1 to 4 p.m. at Polly Hill Arboretum in West Tisbury with Diane Nicholls. Cost per class is $36, or $30 for members. For details or to pre-register, call 508-693-9426. |
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| Down By The Shore |
Wed, July 9, Down By The Shore: an outdoor nature program for adults and children begins at 1 p.m at Felix Neck Wildlife Sanctuary in Edgartown. Also Thursdays at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Cost is $9, $6 for Mass Audubon members. Children under 3 free. For details call 508-627-4850. |
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| Garden Mentoring |
Wed, July 9, Garden Mentoring from 4 to 6 p.m. at the Native Earth Teaching Farm on 94 North Road in Chilmark, also by appointment. Classes are $25 each with the fourth one free. For details, call 508-645-3304 or visit nativeearthteachingfarm.org. |
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| Creative Flower Arrangements |
Wed, July 9, Creative Flower Arrangements from your Garden with floral designer Helene Barr, a five week course, is free at the Vineyard Haven Public Library between 5:30 and 7pm. Students must provide own tools and flowers. Pre-registration required. For details, call 508-696-4210. |
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| The Garden Chair |
Thurs, July 10, The Garden Chair: A Hands-On Workshop from 9 a.m. to noon at Polly Hill Arboretum in West Tisbury with Dan Benarcik allows participants to create a handsome outdoor chair. Cost is $200, or $185 for arboretum members. |
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| Thursday Fun Days at Long Point Refuge |
Thurs, July 10, Thursday Fun Days at Long Point Refuge in West Tisbury with activities from building children's sandcastles to exploring coastal geology on adult hikes. Free with property admission; times vary. For details, call 508-693-7392. |
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| Butterfly Garden work day |
Fri, July 11, Butterfly Garden work day from 10 a.m. to noon at Felix Neck Wildlife Sanctuary in Edgartown. Volunteers welcome every Friday. |
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| Guided Kayak Tour |
Fri, July 11, Guided Kayak Tour begins at Felix Neck at 10 a.m. for ages 11 and up with an adult. Cost is $35 or $28 for Mass Audubon members. Registration required; call 508-627-4850. |
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| Demonstration: Traditional Woven Eel Trap |
Fri, July 11, Demonstration: Traditional Woven Eel Trap with Elizabeth Perry is from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Aquinnah Cultural Center at the Gay Head Cliffs (Vanderhoop Homestead). Also open for guided house tours with $7 suggested donation for adults, $4 for children. |
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| Great Goldfish Release Party |
Fri, July 11, Great Goldfish Release Party is free from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. at Mytoi Garden on Chappaquiddick with games, puzzles and of course, the great goldfish release! For details, call 508-627-7689. |
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| Save The Date |
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| ISLAND PLAN SUMMER FORUMS |
The Island Plan will hold three forums this summer, to present and discuss preliminary findings from two new work groups and the Steering Committee, and to give members of the community the opportunity to provide their input. Each forum is open to the public, is free, and will take place at 7:30 pm.
This summer’s forum’s are:
- Transportation, Monday, July 14, 2008, at the Katharine Cornell Theatre in Vineyard Haven
- Built Environment, Monday, August 4, 2008, at the Union Chapel in Oak Bluffs
- Development and Growth, Wednesday, August 27, 2008 at the New Ag Hall in West Tisbury.
Additional information can be found on the Island Plan website – www.islandplan.org – or by calling 508-693-3453. |
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| Mytoi Volunteer Day |
The Trustees of Reservations
Every Wednesday in July and August, 2008
9 a.m.–12 p.m
A great way to spend the morning! Volunteers needed to prune, weed, and help maintain Chappaquiddick’s Japanese-style garden. Join us at Mytoi on Chappaquiddick anytime throughout the morning. Every extra set of hands is greatly appreciated. Please let us know if you plan to attend; call (508) 627-3599. |
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| MV Commission Update |
Bike Path Study
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As part of ongoing efforts to improve bicycling on the Island, the Martha's Vineyard Regional Transportation Plan and the Island Plan Transportation Work Group have proposed that the Down-Island network of off-road bicycle paths be completed, in order to safely accommodate the highest density of bicycle traffic.
Go to the MVC site for the rest of the press release
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| Climate Change Update |
Seasonal Factor Seen in Melting and Ice Shifts in Greenland
By ANDREW C. REVKIN
July 4, 2008
NY Times
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One of the most vivid symbols of global warming is the torrents of melt water that drain from the lakes that form each summer on Greenland’s ice sheet.
Recent studies have shown that this water, which flows deep into the ice through natural drainpipes called moulins, allows the ice to slide faster over bedrock toward the ocean. And the faster the ice flows, the faster sea levels rise. But a Dutch study using 17 years of satellite measurements in western Greenland suggests that the movement associated with the meltwater is not as rapid as had been feared.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/04/
science/earth/04greenland.html?_r=1&oref=slogin |
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Europe Tells Airlines to Pay for Emissions
June 27, 2008
NY Times
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BRUSSELS — The European Union reached a landmark agreement Thursday to cap emissions from aircraft, raising the stakes in an increasingly ferocious battle with the United States over how to regulate global greenhouse gases.
In the first requirement of its kind, all airlines arriving or leaving from airports in the European Union would be required to buy pollution credits beginning in 2012, joining other industrial polluters that trade in the European emissions market. That includes non-European carriers like American Airlines and Singapore Airlines.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/27/business/
worldbusiness/27air.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1
&oref=slogin&adxnnlx=1214928117-JNStayUsPJfGYUdc23DIlw |
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| Be Prepared! |
Hurricane Maps Detail Vulnerable Island Places in Case of Severe Storm
By MIKE SECCOMBE
MV Gazette
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Almost 3,200 buildings on the Vineyard sit on land which could be inundated by the storm surge of a category four hurricane. Even a category one storm would put almost 400 buildings at risk.
The daunting statistics come out of work done by the Martha’s Vineyard Commission, which plotted the location of structures on the Island against so-called SLOSH (Sea, Lake and Overland Surges from Hurricanes) maps from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
http://www.mvgazette.com/article.php?17154
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| Sustainable Update |
Farm and Field
By JULIA RAPPAPORT
Vineyard Gazette
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First published in the Vineyard Gazette on July 1, 2008. Reprinted with permission from the Vineyard Gazette. Copyright Vineyard Gazette 2007. All rights reserved.
Coffee grinds, apple cores and curly orange carrot peels: straight to the trash they go in most households. But on Island farms, these food scraps (along with egg shells, wilted greens and watermelon seeds) go to the compost. For the farmers, this trash is treasure.
“It’s like crop insurance,” explained Jim Athearn of Morning Glory Farm last week as he stepped down from his tractor.
“We have sandy soil,” he continued. “The goal of every farmer or agriculturalist is to increase the organic content matter of their soil so things will work better. This helps a lot. Things grow more uniformly. They grow faster and lusher.”
Go to the Recycled section for the rest of the article
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| Wastewater Update |
State Senate OKs wastewater bill
July 02, 2008
Cape Cod Times
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BOSTON — A wastewater management bill sponsored by a Cape lawmaker passed unanimously in the state Senate yesterday.
Crafted by state Sen. Robert O'Leary, D-Barnstable, the Massachusetts Clean Water Act would provide financial assistance for wastewater planning to communities that have achieved specific state water quality and management standards.
http://www.capecodonline.com/apps/
pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080702/NEWS/807020359/-1/NEWS01
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| Energy Update |
A clean break from the fossil fuel age
By Deval L. Patrick
July 2, 2008
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EVERYWHERE WE turn, Massachusetts residents are feeling the sting of high energy costs. With crude oil more than $140 a barrel and gasoline more than $4 a gallon, the price of fossil fuels strains household budgets and the Massachusetts economy as a whole. Oil and gas are taking a toll on the environment, too. Greenhouse gases emitted from these fuel sources are disrupting the climate and endangering the Massachusetts coastline.
http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/
editorial_opinion/oped/articles/
2008/07/02/a_clean_break_from_the_fossil_fuel_age/
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| Nature Update |
Bee by Bee
By JONATHAN DAVID FARLEY
June 30, 2008
Pasadena, Calif
NY Times
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IN the closing months of 2006, thousands of American bee hives were found to be almost entirely devoid of bees, victims of a mysterious phenomenon now known as colony collapse disorder. A study of 150,000 managed bee colonies in 15 states, commissioned by the Apiary Inspectors of America, found that from September 2006 to March 2007, roughly one-third of the colonies were lost.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/30/
opinion/30farley.html
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Have ideas for content for the Almanac? Please send them along to:
marticamv@aol.com |
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2008 Household Hazardous Waste Days
Edgartown Transfer Station
9 - 12 PM
May 17, July 19, Sept. 20, Nov. 15.

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