New business owners always face challenges. But Angela Moore and Cindy Walker started the Quechee General Store in March 2020.
A project of the University of Vermont’s Reporting & Documentary Storytelling program.
A project of the University of Vermont’s Reporting & Documentary Storytelling program.
All tagged Central Vermont
New business owners always face challenges. But Angela Moore and Cindy Walker started the Quechee General Store in March 2020.
“Grafting lets you plant a whole orchard for free,” announced Randolph native Camden Walters, manager of the budding Randolph Community Orchard, which along with climate-change activism group 350Vermont organized a tree grafting workshop this past weekend.
Standing on the side of a busy road on a cold, rainy night might not seem like the most gratifying activity at the end of a long winter. According to Aubrey Pelletier, though, being an amphibian crossing guard is an unparalleled way to welcome the spring.
The scent of a thrift shopping excursion is often reminiscent of Grandma’s attic or that basement you never wanted to go into as a kid — dingy and only exciting when you find something everyone else has forgotten about.
It was the night before Christmas Eve and Sharon Russell, director of Rutland’s Open Door Mission, was finishing up and getting ready to head home. As she chatted with the cook, a woman and her young son entered through the back door looking for the thrift store.
Tevye Kelman, a social studies teacher at Randolph Union High School, is running for president of the Vermont chapter of the National Education Association (VT-NEA).
After someone spent almost three weeks at the Randolph Village laundromat during the winter of 2019-2020, Charlie McMeekin knew there was a bigger issue at hand.
After a full day of work on March 1, Cory Krieg hopped on the tractor, picked up his sap tank, and prepared to make some syrup.
Fewer than three weeks after voters approved the measure, the Stockbridge selectboard received a petition that triggers another vote on decoupling from the Rochester Stockbridge Unified District (RSUD).
Unassuming yet influential, “gentle giant” Chris Wood has been organizing on behalf of communities across Vermont— and around this planet—for decades.