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
Live Green Connecticut! co-founders Daphne Dixon and Scot Weicker at Joey B’s Aug 16, 2017 Photo: Leslie Yager
Scot Weicker and Daphne Dixon, the founders of Live Green Connecticut!, are counting down the days to the first-ever craft beer festival in Roger Sherman Baldwin Park, set for Sept 30.
At “The Last Taste of Summer,” guests will each receive a 4 oz souvenir tasting cup that they can rinse at rinsing stations in the park and re-use throughout the festival, which is a “zero waste” event.
“Craft beer is so popular today, and this is a way to draw attention to sustainability while bringing people together,” Weicker said, adding, “The Last Taste of summer is where green meets mainstream.”
“We’ll also have unbelievable food trucks great local bands,” Weicker said.
Food trucks will include LobsterCraft, Melt Mobile, Cowabunga, Dough Girls, Wendy’s Weenies and Bobby Q’s Pit Stop.
Beer and drinks makers participating in the event to date include Guinness, Ballast Point, Shiner, Capt Lawrence, Thimble Island, Spiked Seltzer, Two Roads, Tito’s, New England Cider, Lock City brewing, Owl’s Brew Raddler, Charter Oak, Stony Creek, New Belgium Brewing and Bad Sons.
Local bands who will perform at the festival include The Clams, a classic rock band. Some members of The Clams have been playing together since their days at Greenwich High School in the late 1970s/early 1980’s as the band Revelation.
Other bands include Sacred Fire, a six-piece Latin rock Santana tribute band and The Wilton Steel Community band.
Ken Coulson, a multi–instrument musician, who founded Future Bright, an advisory and think tank in Sustainability, will perform in the VIP tasting tent.
Weicker and Dixon’s non profit, Live Green Connecticut! raises money for zero waste schools fellowship, and their signature event, which took place at Taylor Farm in Norwalk for several years, was family oriented.
The Last Taste of Summer, with its emphasis on craft beer sampling, is more oriented to adults – those age 21+ will get one color bracelet and those 20 and under will have a different bracelet – but the theme of environmental education and sustainability will persist.
“Everything is recyclable, so nothing will go into landfill,” Weicker said of the zero-waste event, adding that City Carting is an event partner.
Dixon, a master gardener who is a passionate advocate for sustainability, said she is working with non profit Food Rescue US (formerly Community Plates) to arrange a food run with leftovers from the food trucks at the close of the event.
The mission of Food Rescue US is to end American food insecurity by directly transferring fresh, usable food that would have otherwise been thrown away from restaurants, grocers and other food industry sources to food insecure families.
Dixon, who only generates a single bag of trash every six months, is an enthusiastic advocate of zero-waste as a goal. “In Connecticut, we’ve run out of landfills,” she said.
“But there’s a market for everything. Think in terms of materials management,” she said, citing the company Junk Luggers, who hope by the year 2020 to be able to find a home for everything they pick up, with nothing going into landfill.
“They’re taking everything and trying to find a market for it, whether it be to paint and repair or take something apart and selling the pieces,” Dixon said. “Think of everything as a commodity. Some is recyclable and some is compostable.”
Relating the environmental theme back to the craft beer sampling, Dixon said, “One of the things I learned about craft beer and its distinct flavors, it relates to the soil that the hops are grown in, and our water in Connecticut is amazing. A lot of the ingredients for the local brews are kept secret.”
Another community partner is “Curbside Compost” a recycling program that picks up food scraps and delivers compost to Fairfield and Westchester County communities.
Weicker said the event will lend support to local Greenwich non profits that are conservation oriented. Additional community partners include the Greenwich Conservation Commission, directed by Denise Savageau, Greenwich Green & Clean and the Green Leaf School Program
General admission is from 1:00pm until 4:30pm.
Tickets are $40 ($35 before August 31). To purchase tickets, please visit: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/
Tickets are also available at Val’s Liquors and Horseneck Liquors.
See also:
Craft Beer Festival Comes to Roger Sherman Baldwin Park, Sept 30
Email news tips to Greenwich Free Press editor Leslie.Yager@GreenwichFreePress.com
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