<html><body style="word-wrap: break-word; -webkit-nbsp-mode: space; -webkit-line-break: after-white-space; "><div apple-content-edited="true">check it out!</div><div><br><div><i>The Small Farms Program at Cornell has announced (below) a series of "Farm Renewable Energy Field Days" that may be of interest to some list subscribers. While the participating sites are located across our region, a farm in Trumansburg will be open to visitors on August 5th. For additional information, to register or receive directions to the sites, please contact Violet Stone, Outreach Coordinator for the Cornell Small Farms Program, at 607-255-9227 or <a href="mailto:vws7@cornell.edu">vws7@cornell.edu</a>. Apologies for cross-postings!<br><br> <br> </i><b>Announcing Farm Renewable Energy Field Days<br> </b>Are you a farmer or agriculture educator interested in renewable energy? <br> The Small Farms Energy Work Team, a project of the Cornell Small Farms<br> Program, invites you to a series of on-farm renewable energy field days<br> located around New York in late July and early August. Come out and meet<br> farmers that have installed small-scale solar, wind and hydro-power. <br> Learn about grants, energy audits, and other energy resources available to<br> farmers. Light refreshments will be provided. The Farm Renewable Energy<br> Field Days are free and open to the public. Please pre-register by<br> calling Violet Stone or Adrienne Masler at 607-255-9227, or send an e-mail<br> to <a href="mailto:vws7@cornell.edu">vws7@cornell.edu</a>. We will provide you with directions.<br><br> <b>Region: Northern NY, Clinton County<br> Saturday, July 25, 2009: 11am-1pm.</b> Photovoltaics at Happy Haven Dairy Farm<br> in Mooers, NY. The 12.6-kilowatt PV (solar electric) system installed by<br> Gary and Connie Menard produces enough electricity to offset about 25<br> percent of their dairy farm’s annual energy needs. Assistance from The<br> New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) and the<br> USDA helped to reduce the cost of the six arrays. For those times when<br> the energy produced by the panels is greater than the needs of the farm,<br> the excess flows into the utility grid. The Menard’s electric meter will<br> literally run backwards at such times, giving them full retail value for<br> that energy. Co-sponsored by Franklin County Cooperative Extension and<br> the Cornell Small Farms Energy Work Team.<br><br> <b>Region: Northern NY, Jefferson County<br> Thursday, July 30th, 2009. 10:00am-noon.</b> Photovoltaics at Lilac Lawns Farm<br> in Mannsville, NY. Dee McConnell, who maintains a 120-cow milking herd,<br> will give us a tour of his 9600 watt photovoltaic panels. The panels were<br> installed by Upstate Energy Solutions based in Ithaca, NY and are<br> projected to produce 10% of Dee’s total electricity usage. Dee received<br> an incentive from NYSERDA which covered 30% of the total cost. <br> Co-sponsored by Jefferson County Cooperative Extension and the Cornell<br> Small Farms Energy Work Team.<br><br> <b>Region: Central New York, Schuyler County<br> Wednesday, August 5th. 10:00am noon</b>. Solar, Wind and Water Energy at On<br> Warren Pond Farm in <b>Trumansburg, NY</b>. Sam Warren has generated his own<br> electricity since the mid-1990s using solar panels, windmills, and a water<br> wheel. On Warren Pond Farm is not connected to the utility grid;<br> batteries store energy for later use as it is created. Sam built his own<br> system from the ground up: he welded the water wheel and installed the<br> windmill himself. He “financed” the solar panels by selling his<br> 18-wheeler when he retired from trucking. Sam and sweetheart Jill Swenson<br> raise American bison for breeding stock and fallow deer. Sponsored by the<br> Cornell Small Farms Energy Work Team.<br><br> <b>Region: Southern Tier, Steuben County<br> Thursday, August 6th, 2009. 10:00am noon.</b> Solar Powered Watering System<br> in Pulteney, NY. Come out and see Bob and Marylou Bondi’s solar powered<br> watering system installed for their heritage livestock operation. The<br> watering system supplies water to herds on both sides of a county highway<br> complete with holding tanks and troughs with demand triggering floats. The<br> farm also has a pond water reservoir which plumbs below the frost line to<br> a pasture hydrant using only gravity. Bob and Marylou were one of 12 farms<br> to be reimbursed 50% of the cost of the solar powered pump with assistance<br> from NYSERDA through RC&D. Bob and Marylou also received a NYS Historic<br> Barn Grant to help restore the A-frame and Gambrell barns on their 200<br> year old farm. Co-sponsored by the Central NY RC&D and the Cornell Small<br> Farms Energy Work Team.<br></div></div><br><div>- via the FLX Permaculture list</div><div><br class="webkit-block-placeholder"></div></body></html>