Thursday, August 2, 2018

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Our special section inside offers a closer look at community ventures and their workers.

6C 9D al Home 8B Rough Cut ucharme Funer 3D n 3D Sanderson-D ete Constructio 7C Concr 5A Sargent Surveys 7B LaRose 6B Geology Shard Villa rds 7D Applied 9D Orcha LLC Lincoln 4A Sunrise 6B Services, Companies Medic MacIntyre 5A e Insurance nt ark The PC 5D e Service y Co-Operativ College of Vermo 2D Maple LandmOral elors Tom’s Marin of Addison Count 6B ry View Community Investment Couns 7A Surge Way l Maple 9B rk/ lofacia United Comp 9A h Netwo Community 5B and Maxil Sandwich cial 7A 8C Market Center UVM Healt 7 South 4A Costello’s Carpet & Paint le Trail Finanal Hospital Medical 3D Marb 8B Porter Farm 7A Social LLC Anim 802 2C any, erce an Horse Countryside Center 8D n Comp Middlebury Bagel & Deli 7B 3A ber of Comm UVM Morg al Hospital A. Johnso 5D Inc. County Tire Marriott 8A County Cham ission Sales Middlebury Eye Associates, nnes Anim House 7B 2D by p Verge yard Addison 2C Comm Co-O Court 9C Opera h County Middlebury Natural Foods 4C Law unity Trust of Healt Vergennes Addison Festival 9D Deppman 4B Department County Comm mic Middlebury New Filmmakers 10D 2D Vermont Travel rs Addison 8D Econo Sports y Interio Direct lebury 8C Field & Count Midd 2C Paint Vermont Sweets Addison 9D t Corporation & Hospice 5B Distinctive 1B Company Gas tecture Middlebury 6B 2A Developmeny Home Health Brewing Vermont 3A ated Archi t Travel Drop-In 4C Integr Inc. t Count nt Milne 5A Dairy on King gemen enden & Vermo Farms Addis 7A DuBois 4C r lebury Move Mana Storage County Indep Waste Monument 9D 9B at Midd Vermont Addison 5D Health Cente erated e Eastview Estate 3A County Solid ct nt Refrig Blind Mountain Cleaning Servic 2D 9A Vermo Real Addison 8B & Distri s t rative h Emilo 10C Shade Mr. Mike’ 4C Managemen Creamery Coope Action Churc Vermont 3C Beginnings Faith in abot 9D Soap urant Natural 9C 8C zine/ Vermont Ice Resta nce Agri-Mark/C Title, LLC Maga & zine Insura Fire 8B Sports Land Maga NFP 9C s 4D Vermont American n Gap Distillery 9A 1 Auto Parts Ski + Ride rs Foster Motor Sotheby’s 8C Number Books 5D Vermont 3C ns Appalachia Orthodontics 8D Fitness Cente Creek Used ing School Four Seaso 4D Realty Sun in l nt Otter 8A iates 4D Vermo Hook Assoc 8A Internationaations Market 4B Gold Oxford RugVermont 4D 6A Public Village Greenal Therapy Autumn 6B of Freedom 8C Real Estate Physic Packard Eye Care 2C 5C w Bikes Wells Inc. e B.L. Valley bauer 8B Hollo y, Frog Garag 5C nce Agenc Peak View ical Solutions 8B 7B Weybridge Betsy Spann 1D Gaines InsuraBoat Repair 8D Perkins Electr 7C 4D WhistlePig Place Services BFit ries 4A ers Inc. Gill’s anical Indust Broth Pike Mech 5B Electric, Inc. Woodware Agency Bourdeau 7A Boiler & Glen Peck 8D Company, Yoga Insurance Plouffe’s 6A r/ Lumber Yarn & Bourdon 4D r’s Corne Goodro Vac 7C N Reporter Quilte rs CH on Sew 10A Brand 4B Green Peppe teer Services/AR 5C Middlebury rics 7C Volun Brian Slavin onics 2D ow Pediat Hospice 10B Rainb Electr l ation 4C Estate Bristo 2B Renov IPJ Real itals cial Raymond 1C Fuels, Inc. Bristol Finansburg Animal Hosp 4B Jackman rk Miles 4B an’s, Inc. Bristol/HineValley Equipment 7C any Jackm 8C Good Comp Champlain Valley Motorsports Keeping Cook Champlain Valley Properties al Kiss the 5C Champlain Valley Small Anim Champlain Clinic Mobile

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Vol. 72 No. 31

Students are joining professional actors on stage at Bread Loaf this week. See Arts + Leisure.

Many Champs and Marlins excelled at the CVSL championship meet. See Sports, Page 1B.

WHAT it’s not of es say that of the value sometim Part know Wise people WHO you know. getting to but is really special you know, small community pages in this ce a you. The help introduand living in around section will the people Community” in Addison County in people “Profiles nt of those makes Vermo you to more of what Brandon. at the core to live. is information Community dinary place tidbit of extraor sser, bankor some such an the name eper, hairdre together. Knowing stick or, shopke us neighb helps conversais what about your mechanic engaging in public y make a er, or car and can actuall Volunteeringg that your voice d. engage ion or keeps us business, institut and tions, knowin is what each unique difference, ual and creplay that’s Each individhas a role to of our efforts, we organizationAnd through each thick with this important. community. some time to some of the ate a vibrant you to spend names We invite ment and put on the importown. Reflect our towns and special supple see around r to make while also rectogethe faces you work, towns working live and in small tance of place to of living to make state a great one of the joys one of us helps that g each how ognizin to know n County is getting whole. to the Addiso up the greaterthan 30 years, this special section the For more has published more about little bit our communiknow a Independent in 150 readers a vital role around help our play such , we visited , introduce people who year’s section photos the this snap their stories. While l ties. In ses to unique the genera area businesand tell their widely, varies teams as a tribute story their of each story serves ers who particulars same — each ees and employ the theme is that it is. you take orking employ hard-w the success and that to the ses business pages make each you enjoy these f with these businesfind We hope ees. You’ll aint yoursel to reacqu of their employ with products the time the names is filled not only of those who — and the smiles return. community offer in that our s, but also with we Editors thanks — The and service day and the each greet us

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Thursday, August 2, 2018 

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Bristol Stampede hits $2M milestone CF fundraiser enjoys huge weekend

VISITORS TO KAYHART Brothers Dairy query employees who are preparing cows for milking in the West Addison dairy’s new, state-of-theart parlor, while event volunteers answer visitors’ questions during Saturday’s Breakfast on the Farm event.

Independent photos/Christopher Ross

Dairy farming takes center stage

More than 2,000 flock to Kayhart Brothers Farm for breakfast, education By CHRISTOPHER ROSS WEST ADDISON — As the last visitor departed from Saturday’s Breakfast on the Farm event, hosts Steve and Tim Kayhart of Kayhart Brothers Dairy in West Addison were walking on clouds. “It was great for us, of course, but it was also great for the dairy industry as a whole,” Steve said. The next day, however, he found himself in a funk. “It was a little bit like postvacation depression,” Steve said. “Like going back to work. There was all that planning for the event, then suddenly it was over.” The feeling, he discovered, has a name: “Breakfast on the Farm hangover.” Spirits were of course not among the offerings at Breakfast on the Farm, which drew 2,020 people from Addison County and beyond — unless you count the spirits of community, cooperation and education. Vermont Breakfast on the Farm is held annually around the state to encourage the public to visit local farms and learn how their

By the way Addison County Transit Resources and Champlain Valley Equipment are partnering again to provide “Fare-Free to the (See By the way, Page 14A)

Index Obituaries................................. 6A Classifieds.......................... 6B-8B Service Directory............... 4B-5B Entertainment.........Arts + Leisure Community Calendar......... 8A-9A Arts Calendar.........Arts + Leisure Sports................................. 1B-3B

food is produced. Free breakfasts are served — pancakes, maple syrup, sausage, blueberries, Cabot cheddar, Green Mountain Creamery yogurt, plus plenty of coffee and milk — followed by self-guided

TEN-YEAR-OLD 4-H member Calvin Almeida of West Addison helps out in a nearby dairy farm.

farm tours. Vermonters who don’t live on farms can visit educational stations focusing on subjects like animal care, water quality and new technologies. The events are funded with grants from the Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food & Markets, and by several sponsors from the agricultural business community. “Farmers need to do a better job of telling their story,” Tim told “Vermont Fences” earlier this year. “We’re always too busy doing the work. It’s very important that people understand why we do what we do.” Rene Thibault of the New England Dairy Promotion Board, one of Breakfast on the Farm’s sponsors, agreed. “It’s a chance for people with concerns, or those who have questions, to come and get the facts straight from the source, the experts — dairy farmers. They are the ones who live on the land and work with it and their animals every single day.” Organizers are hoping such events will help clear up misconceptions about dairy farming, especially where animal care and environmental stewardship

are concerned, Thibault said: “Some people think dairy farmers don’t care for, or mistreat, their animals, and that’s just not the case. Each and every cow on the farm represents the livelihood of the dairy farming family. And most dairy farms wouldn’t have what they do without healthy soils and clean water.” The opportunity to bust some myths was one of the reasons that Rob Hunt of Bonapecta Holsteins in West Addison volunteered to help with Breakfast on the Farm. “So many people get their info from, say, their yoga teachers,” he said at his station in the milking parlor. “It’s important for people to know what’s really going on on a dairy farm.” Hunt described an image that had gone “viral” on Facebook — a cow comfortably secured in a specially designed hoof-trimming chute, which someone had labeled a “Cow Crusher” as part of a larger rant about animal cruelty. “I mean, why would we want to do that?” Hunt said, incredulous. (See Dairy farmers, Page 13A)

By CHRISTOPHER ROSS neighborhood of 2 o’clock Friday BRISTOL — More than 20 years afternoon,” said Stampede coago, when Sheri Bedard Bannister organizer Bonita Bedard. designed a logo for her family’s No one jumped out of a cake or annual fundraiser, the Three Day set off fireworks. Local radio station Stampede Toward a Cure for Cystic WOKO, one of the Stampede’s most Fibrosis, she had no idea that dozens steadfast supporters, didn’t interrupt of people in her community would its broadcast with announcements one day get it tattooed or fanfare. A plaque on their bodies. and a few photographs “I never It has come to commemorate the be known as the thought I’d be day, but for the most “Stampede Man,” someone to get part the 150 dedicated though it’s neither man a tattoo. But the volunteers spread out nor woman. Inspired Stampede Man across Mount Abraham by Japanese writing’s and everything Union High School’s gentle curves, a lithe fields kept right it stands for has athletic human figure seems on working. to hold the sun above become such a $2,000,000 became its head. Or make part of my DNA $2,000,001. a gift of it. An arc that it might as The three-day lawn sweeping from that sun well be on my sale, including books suggests movement and body, too.” and furniture, raised progress. $54,784 this year; the — Bonita Bedard silent auction $30,500; “The logo was really about creating our own sponsorships $25,675. language around this thing we didn’t By Sunday the weekend total stood understand,” Bannister said. “The sun at $127,000 and the grand total at is meant to represent the cure (for $2,067,000. cystic fibrosis), but it’s also something That night a photograph appeared more. It’s about hope and community on the Stampede’s Facebook page: a and all the pieces that go into that.” Celtic knot of arms and wrists, plus Last weekend, that community, one thumb, each sporting a Stampede which for 28 years has defined itself Man tattoo. with hope, achieved an extraordinary “I never thought I’d be someone milestone: $2 million raised for the to get a tattoo,” Bedard said. “But Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. the Stampede Man and everything it “It happened somewhere in the (See Stampede, Page 14A)

Middlebury eyes new bid to boost economy

Composition of panel spurs discussion By JOHN FLOWERS others to settle and grow in Addison MIDDLEBURY — The County’s shire town. Middlebury selectboard on Tuesday Led by Addison County Economic wrote the first paragraph in the Development Corp. Executive latest chapter about Director Fred Kenney, spurring economic The panel is the economic health development in town, committee will spend being asked though members got the next few months off to a rocky start in to deliver its speaking with area forming a new panel report and business leaders and that will lead the effort. recommendations studying state and Following a to the selectboard regional programs 5 0 - m i n u t e - l o n g in mid-November. that could make discussion, the Middlebury a more selectboard voted 4-3 attractive destination on a slate of nine members of the for entrepreneurs. new “Middlebury Economic Health The panel is being asked to deliver Committee 2018,” a group charged its report and recommendations to with recommending “several the selectboard in mid-November. economic development tools” the Local officials are launching town could use to help current this latest economic development businesses flourish while inducing (See Middlebury, Page 6A)

Local couple prepares for Muslim pilgrimage By JOHN FLOWERS a religious organization he led from MIDDLEBURY — Farhad Khan 2009-2010 and from 2014-2016. has spent a half-century dreaming Established in 1995, VIS currently about a trip designed to fortify his counts around 3,500 members from religious faith and cleanse his spirit. such countries as Bosnia, Somalia, The Middlebury resident’s dream is India and Iraq, according to Khan. about to come true. In addition to providing Islamic Farhad and his wife, Amtul, on worship services and fellowship, Aug. 11 will join 16 other Vermont Islamic Society members of the Vermont “I’m very has kindled many Islamic Society (VIS) in excited; it’s friendships among a pilgrimage to Mecca, unbelievable. members. The Khans have Saudi Arabia. It’s called become particularly close the “Hajj,” a religious I feel very with eight other couples obligation that every adult blessed.” with whom they routinely — Amtul Khan go on trips, picnics and Muslim must fulfill at least once in their lifetime, if other social events. they are physically able and have the The friends earlier this year decided resources to do so. to unite for what will be their most “It is a self-purifying thing,” Farhad ambitious and important trip together Khan said of what will be a 6,248-mile — the Hajj to Mecca. The Hajj takes odyssey from Middlebury to Mecca. place each year during the last month “It is a new beginning for us.” of the Islamic calendar, and lasts five Khan, who is a Middlebury or six days. The crucial stage of their selectman, is a longtime, active voyage will begin in Medina, Saudi member of Burlington-based VIS, (See Khan, Page 11A)

Delicious theater

NEW TOWN HALL Theater Executive Director Mark Bradley, left, and THT founder Doug Anderson cut into a THT-shaped cake during the theater’s 10th anniversary celebration Tuesday night. Anderson is transitioning into the role of artistic director, and Bradley will start his new job on Aug. 8. More photos on Page 10A. Independent photo/Trent Campbell


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