Celebrate Earth Day's 40th anniversary at the Dutchess County Fairgrounds

HUDSON VALLEY — The Dutchess County Legislature has proclaimed that the Hudson Valley’s 40th Earth Day anniversary celebration at the Dutchess County Fairgrounds is the “Official Earth Day Event of Dutchess County.� The environmental fair planned for Saturday, April 24, and Sunday, April 25, boasts free activities for everyone who cares about the planet with composting lessons, free movie screenings and music concerts and e-waste collecting.

Children under 12 will get in for free, and there are all sorts of earth-friendly activities geared toward the young, including pony rides, solar cars, GPS treasure hunts, endangered animals from the Two-by-Two Zoo and environmental magic shows. Young members of the 4H will also be there to teach younger children about goats, llamas, horses and poultry. And Big Green TV’s environmental news will be in the kids’ building filming for its next show.

Earth Day is about learning how to live more harmoniously and consciously on this planet. There will be experts talking about solar energy economics and showing how to harvest rainwater, raise chickens and compost. There will be free tai chi classes both days at noon and at 2 p.m. and a vinyasa yoga class on Sunday.

There will be two days of free concerts by Musicians for Clean Air, who will be performing everything from rock to classical to jazz/funk to African drumming. Food and agriculture will be featured in Building E, with local cheeses, pickles and winter vegetables available for purchase.

There will also be the opportunity to sign up for a share of goods from local farms. Community supported agriculture (CSAs) shareholders help support participating farms that then produce local dairy products, fruits and vegetables and more and then get to enjoy the bounty all season long.

This Earth Day is also the perfect time to load up unused consumer electronics into a car or truck and drop them off at the fairgrounds for recycling. They don’t have to work. Appliances cannot be accepted, but everything else electronic can be recycled, including those boxy computer monitors, cell phones, batteries, VHS players, flat bed scanners, old boom boxes, etc. All of these contain toxic chemicals like lead, mercury cadmium, arsenic — chemicals that can pollute soil and groundwater and, if released into the atmosphere, pollute the air we breathe.

Organizers are hoping for lots of recyclers to turn up, as only 13.6 percent of consumer electronic products are currently recovered for recycling. Follow the signs or look for the big pallet of TVs. It’s only $10 to have a truck or van emptied by the professional recovery team. The benefits are twofold: doing  something important for the environment and getting rid of a lot of useless gadgets that are taking up space. Plus, everyone who recycles gets into the fair for free.

The Earth Day Celebration at the fairgrounds will be a zero landfill event. This means that no trash generated during the two-day celebration will be put into a landfill. Waste will be recycled or turned into electricity at the Poughkeepsie waste-to-energy plant.

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