“5 Local Companies Bring New Controversial Film to Burlington - DVD Creation” plus 1 more |
5 Local Companies Bring New Controversial Film to Burlington - DVD Creation Posted: 07 Nov 2009 12:56 AM PST 5 Local Companies Bring New Controversial Film to Burlington Vermont Launches "A Chemical Reaction" (November 05, 2009) ![]() BURLINGTON, VT -- (Marketwire) -- 11/05/09 -- On the heels of a sellout premiere at the World Film Festival in Montreal and across the United States, the inspirational, yet controversial documentary "A Chemical Reaction" will come to Burlington for its Vermont premiere Wednesday, Nov. 18 at 6:30 and 8 pm, screenings at Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center with a reception from 5:30 - 6:30 pm. Sponsored by five Vermont companies, Ben & Jerry's, Seventh Generation, Green Mountain Coffee, Main Street Landing and Gardener's Supply, tickets are $10 and any profits from tickets will go to support a non-profit foundation known as SafeLawns.org. Both Director Brett Plymale and Paul Tukey will be at a reception from 5:30 - 6:30 pm at the Main Street Landing Performing Arts Center. Tickets are available through www.flyntix.org or by calling 863-5966. ![]() The feature-length film by Maine director Brett Plymale, "A Chemical Reaction," was described as "rousing" and awarded four stars by the film critics of the Montreal Gazette. The film has also drawn the ire of representatives from the billion-dollar chemical lawn care industry, who called the film's executive producer and narrator, Paul Tukey, an "enviro-maniac" in a widespread email campaign launched Monday, Aug. 31 -- the day of the film's Montreal screening. Tukey, a former HGTV host and the founder of SafeLawns.org, appears frequently on screen during "A Chemical Reaction," while interviewing key figures in the anti-pesticide movement in Canada and the U.S. He said his goal in making the film is to create awareness of the health hazards and environmental degradation associated with lawn care chemicals. "Canadian doctors and the Canadian courts have looked at the toxicity associated with chemical lawn care and have banned these products in much of that nation," said Tukey, author of the Organic Lawn Care Manual (Storey 2007). "Our hope is that people watch the movie and say, 'Canada has banned these products, why do we still use them in the United States?' This issue is relevant to everyone where chemical fertilizers and pesticides run off into the lakes, rivers and streams." Much of the movie's story focuses on Dr. June Irwin, a dermatologist who spurred the first town in Canada to ban lawn and garden chemical pesticides in 1991. When Hudson, Quebec, told the lawn care giant then known as ChemLawn that it couldn't apply its synthetic chemical products within town borders, it set off a chain of high-profile court cases that culminated in the Canadian Supreme Court in 2001. The town won the case in a landmark 9-0 decision and the chemical ban soon spread to the entire province of Quebec. Ontario enacted lawn chemical restrictions this past Earth Day and hundreds of other Canadian municipalities have also passed legislation. For the past several years, Tukey has traveled across the United States and Canada in a relentless quest to tell the Hudson story and urge municipalities to follow suit. He said he is delighted by the support of the Burlington community; he and Plymale, the director, will both be in attendance and offer a question-and-answer session and book signing after each screening. "The film's themes of community activism, environmental stewardship and political independence will resonate very well in Vermont," said Tukey. "We've always worked closely with Gardener's Supply and we're grateful to Ben & Jerry's, Seventh Generation, Green Mountain Coffee and Gardeners Supply for making this event possible. "We hope this is just the first of many screenings and heightened awareness across the state," continued Tukey. ABOUT SAFELAWNS.ORG: SafeLawns.org is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to reduction in the use of lawn and garden pesticides and synthetic chemical fertilizers. It has produced a series of high-profile campaigns since its inception in 2006. To view a movie trailer, visit www.ChemicalReactionMovie.com. Image Available: http://www2.marketwire.com/mw/frame_mw?attachid=1108216 CONTACTS: Brett Plymale Maree Gaetani
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Think spring in the fall - BurlingtonFreePress.com Posted: 24 Oct 2009 03:33 AM PDT October is for raking leaves, carving pumpkins and putting up storm windows. Gardeners know there is another seasonal chore, one made for autumn afternoons. Now is the time to plant flower bulbs, to bloom in the warmth of spring and summer. "The ground has cooled so it's prime-time for planting bulbs," said Ann Whitman, 53, of Bolton. Whitman is a home gardener and the green goods supervisor at Gardener's Supply in Burlington. "You can really plant bulbs right up until the ground freezes. As long as you can dig." Whitman named the usual range of bulbs that gardeners plant this time of year, and into November: daffodils, tulips, crocuses and lilies. Other suggestions: alliums, which usually bloom in June and July, and fritillaria. Even if it snows the day after you plant your bulbs, they should be fine, Whitman said. "They're all safely tucked under the ground," she said. One year, a warm winter with a January thaw, Whitman planted bulbs Jan. 15. "It worked," she said. "People thought it was crazy, but everything came up." Autumn is bulb-planting time because of the production and harvest cycle, Whitman said. Bulbs are commercially produced in the Netherlands, where production involves cutting off the flowers to nurture the growth of the bulb (as opposed to flower and seeds). The harvest is in July, after which the bulbs are conditioned and sorted by size, Whitman said. The bulbs are then packaged and shipped, typically in August. "That's why you don't see them in the stores till September," she explained. For Whitman, fall gardening means not just planting bulbs, but pulling weeds, cleaning debris from her flower beds, and cutting perennial stalks close to the ground. She even has winter chores: On nice days in February and March, Whitman starts pruning her fruit trees. For fall bulb-planting, Whitman has some tips: Small animals sometimes dig up bulbs, alerted to the area by disturbed soil. To protect the bulbs, place a piece of chicken wire or other covering, such as stones or flower pots, over the soil. Leave it on the sight until the ground freezes. This content has passed through fivefilters.org. |
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