2016 Rain Barrel Artists & Locations Announced!

artistic-barrels

What are ‘Artistic Rain Barrels’?

In Fall of 2015, Bluegrass Greensource commissioned local artists to design and paint fully functional rain barrels, inspired by the theme of Kentucky’s rich horse culture and horseracing. After considering proposals, Bluegrass Greensource selected 10 original designs and the artists set to work. The results are pretty spectacular!

What do the Rain Barrels do for the environment?

Rain barrels connect to your downspout, decreasing the amount of rain that runs off your property, which aids in preventing water pollution and flooding.  Every time it rains, unabsorbed water rushes to storm drains and directly to local waterways.  This water carries with it pollutants such as pet waste, automotive fluids and fertilizer.

The water saved in rain barrels can be used for watering flowers, gardens and lawns all through the summer, even in times of drought.  Reduced water demand will lower your use of municipal water supplies, saving you money!

Where can I see the Rain Barrels up close?

The 2016 Rain Barrels are currently on display in high-traffic coffee shops and local businesses, including the Kentucky Horse Park and the Kentucky Theatre. Click here to view our interactive map of all of the 2016 locations!

We’ll reunite all of the rain barrels at GreenFest, on May 21st, 2016, where they will be available for purchase! Each rain barrel is $200, with all proceeds benefiting Bluegrass Greensource’s environmental education activities throughout Central Kentucky.

The public display of the rain barrels serves as a reminder of the importance of proper stormwater management and the small changes individuals can make at home to improve local water quality!

There’s a rain barrel I LOVE, but I won’t be at GreenFest- can I buy it later?

Yes! Please contact chris@bggreensource.org to purchase after May 21st.

 

 

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Green Waves Radio: April 22, 2016 |Homeplace High Adventure

Green Waves Radio: April 22, 2016
Host: Chris Porter, Development Director

Guests: Tyler Offerman and Will Cripps, Homeplace High Adventure

Chris interviews Tyler and Will of Someplace High Adventure, a new businesses offering guide-led adventures throughout some of the most beautiful places in nature throughout Eastern Kentucky. Learn about their community and sustainability philosophies, and how to get in touch to take an adventure of your own.

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Green Waves Radio: April 8, 2016 | John Saylor, Program Manager Senior of Natural Resource Operations

Green Waves Radio: April 8, 2016
Host: Bridget Abernathy, Outreach Specialist

Guest: John Saylor, Program Manager Senior of Natural Resource Operations

Bridget interviews John Saylor, Program Manager Senior of Natural Resource Operations, in the Division of Environmental Services with Lexington City Government. John shares the history of the Urban Forestry program in Lexington, and plans for the program’s continued growth.

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Green Waves Radio: March 25, 2016 | Guest: Traci Waters, Recycled Granite

Green Waves Radio: March 25, 2016 
Host: Chris Porter, Development Director
Guest: Traci Waters, Owner and Manager of Recycled Granite

Chris interviews Traci Waters, owner and manager of Frankfort-based business, Recycled Granite. Founded in 2015, Recycled Granite craftshand-cut split-face granite tiles, as well as granite pavers for home and commercial applications. Traci shares how their unique products help divert scraps from the granite fabrication process that would otherwise end up in area landfills.

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Rain Gardens: Beneficial & Beautiful!

Rain Garden MapRain gardens are an excellent and proven way to limit run off from entering our storm sewers and streams. In addition to helping reduce nonpoint source pollution such as litter, fertilizer, and animal waste (from pets or livestock) from entering our waterways, rain gardens can be an attractive way to address these challenges, particularly where urban-related runoff is a problem.

For the past decade, Bluegrass Greensource has been educating Central Kentucky homeowners about the benefits of rain gardens, in addition to providing the technical and financial resources needed to install them. Our goal is to increase awareness of water pollution, how it happens, and how to clean it up, especially when it comes to sources of pollution that average person has some control over. Our approach is to educate residents on how to select an appropriate site for the garden, how to construct it, and what plants are suited for a rain garden. In the time that we have worked to increase the installation of rain gardens, we have learned that most people also need information on how to renovate, maintain, and care for a rain garden once it is has been established.

In the past few years, we have worked with the Kentucky Division of Water on a grant program designed to greatly increase the number of gardens throughout Central Kentucky. Our efforts have been very successful, with more than 50 rain gardens installed or renovated in the past two years. This particular project focused on homeowners in the six counties that border Fayette: Bourbon, Clark, Jessamine, Madison, Scott and Woodford, in addition to extending the program to Fayette County in the second year of the grant. In this program, we reached more than 350 people through 22 workshops, three rain garden tours, eight community festivals, and outreach to various schools and scout groups.

With spring finally here, it’s a great time to get started on installing your own rain garden. If you are interested, but aren’t sure where to start, we’ve got you covered. You can visit a dedicated page on our website. Once there, you can access a very popular Rain Garden Manual that we produced to help residents better understand the how’s and why’s of installing a garden. Additionally, if you’re looking for inspiration and want to see some cool examples of existing gardens, we have created an interactive map that provides a guide and brief profile of area rain gardens.

So get inspired, find the resources you need, and join us in creating sites that are beautiful and help reduce pollution!

 

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Green Waves Radio: March 18, 2016 | Guest: Nic Williamson, Urban Forest Initiative

Green Waves Radio: March 18, 2016
Host: Bridget Abernathy, Outreach Specialist

Guests: Nic Williamson, Urban Forest Initiative

Bridget interviews Nic Williamson, a founding member of the Urban Forest Initiative. Nic is graduate student of the University of Kentucky Department of Forestry. Nic shares about the inception of this working group whose mission is to advocate for and elevate the function, value and perception of urban forests in the Bluegrass Region.

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Green Waves Radio: March 11, 2016 | Melanie VanHouten, Josephine Sculpture Park

Green Waves Radio: March 11, 2016
Host: Chris Porter, Development Director

Guests: Melanie VanHouten, Josephine Sculpture Park

Chris interviews Melanie VanHouten, Artistic Director of Josephine Sculpture Park. Located in Frankfort, KY, Josephine Sculpture Park provides community arts education and creative experiences, while conserving the beauty of Kentucky’s native, rural landscape.

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Green Waves Radio: February 19, 2016 | Guest: Ryan Koch, Seedleaf

Green Waves Radio: February 19, 2016 
Host: Ashley Bryant Cheney, Environmental Educator
Guest: Ryan Koch, Executive Director of 
Seedleaf

In this episode, Ashley interviews Ryan about Seedleaf, a Lexington nonprofit dedicated to increasing access to fresh and healthy food in food deserts throughout Lexington. Seedleaf maintains sixteen community gardens, manages a composting program that collects materials from local area restaurants, and provides education through Master Community Gardener classes, cooking classes for kids, and CLUCK, a program that teaches about urban chicken keeping.

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Growth of Energy Education at Bluegrass Greensource

Ever wonder what Bluegrass Greensource staff are up to? Every so often, we like to provide first-person descriptions of some of the work our staff complete in the  communities we serve. This month, we hear from Olivia Oakley, an Americorps Vista who is working hard to provide energy education to Central Kentucky youth and adults.

Olivia Energy Education
Students work on creating their cardboard homes, which they will then work to make more energy efficient.

As Bluegrass Greensource’s Energy-Efficiency Educator, I have been developing and providing energy education to youth and adults in Fayette County. Since September, I have been working to bring new energy activities into the Lexington schools we serve. One of these new activities is the Energy House project, an activity originally from the NEED project. This project requires groups of students to make an energy efficient cardboard house. With specific rules and guidelines, children learn to weatherize their homes by reducing air leaks and increasing insulation. This activity requires students to use real world cost applications to make their miniature home energy efficient by using materials such as caulk, cotton padding, and weather stripping, which help students learn the costs associated with saving energy. This activity targets education in energy efficiency, weatherization, conductors/insulators, cost conservation, and basic math calculations. So far, the Green Team at Sayre School and the Science Club at Cassidy Elementary have successfully participated in this project. It is extremely rewarding to watch students as they problem solve and work together to learn about residential energy use.

For younger groups (preschool through kindergarten), a big project like the Energy House is much too complex. However, it is possible to use Bluegrass Greensource’s residential energy audit kits and infrared cameras to tailor energy lessons in ways that makes sense to them. For example, I have developed a Window Coloring Activity that better explains Infrared pictures. I first explain how an infrared camera works by taking a “thermogram,” which measures temperature variations throughout different surfaces.

An infrared photo of this class makes energy personal and fun!
An infrared photo of this class makes energy personal and fun!

I then show the students dramatic thermograms like a picture of the inside of a refrigerator or the outside of a hot cup of coffee. From there, students are given a blank window to color in, and I ask them to think about what a thermogram of a window might look like. After we are done coloring, we take a picture of a window inside the classroom and discuss our colored windows. Even kids as young as three and four are able to discuss how color and temperature relate to each other in a thermogram.

Discussing such a broad topic such as “energy” can be challenging, as there are many avenues for discussion. When asking students what they already know about energy, I often hear about their understanding of how bodies use energy to move and jump. This is great, and I love coming into classrooms in Fayette County and hearing from even the youngest kids about energy. As an Environmental Educator, it is my job to take their understanding of energy a step further and instill in these students a sense of responsibility toward our natural environment, one that makes connections between energy and the environment. My goal is for students to better understand how energy is produced and used in Kentucky and why it’s important to conserve it. Home energy is one of  biggest areas of electricity usage in the Commonwealth and is also where most students will be able to make the biggest difference through affordable equipment and basic behavior changes. This makes our efforts of increasing and further developing energy education in Fayette County extremely important.

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