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"Stay on trail, don't ski off trail. Never ski alone, and if something were to happen, make sure you call 911 sooner as opposed to later," says Killington Police Chief Whit Montgomery.
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Vermont Edition has a conversation with Unlikely Riders, an organization that gets BIPOC Vermonters into the outdoors.
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The storm whacked parts of Vermont with reported wind gusts reaching around 70 to 90 miles per hour. And in one valley in Cambridge, the wind wreaked havoc, uprooting giant trees and damaging multiple buildings.
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In order to survive the winter, deer in Vermont seek refuge in areas forested with dense, mature softwood trees like hemlock, balsam fir, red spruce, and white pine.
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Monday morning's storm was one of the most damaging to the state’s power grid in recent history. It left over 35,000 homes in Vermont without power.
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The earliest annual snowfall recorded on Mount Mansfield was on Sept. 15, 1959, while the latest was Nov. 20, 1978.
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Nils Shenholm builds saunas in the Finnish tradition at his Duxbury workshop.
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Gather up all the things you'll need - germinating soil, small containers, seeds and a grow light. Then, come late March or early April, get your tomato starts planted indoors.
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Some plants eat meat! These carnivorous plants tend to grow in wet areas and bogs but certain types will grow well indoors, with proper watering and feeding techniques.
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Local gardening expert Charlie Nardozzi has been talking about no-dig gardening techniques for awhile. He compares his practices to those of another gardening "Charlie," Charles Dowding from England, who has been no-dig gardening for decades.