BEREA — Dark clouds hovered low overhead Saturday and the ground was damp from a light shower, but brightly painted barrels made for a colorful scene as Berea launched the first Rain Barrel Festival.
The historic drought of 2007 was only a memory, but those memories and heartfully painted barrels were enough to fill Memorial Park with people. The drought, which began in late spring and persisted into fall, was a “wake-up call” to a lot of people, said Mark Jeantheau, as he took a break from fitting unpainted barrels for sale.
Jeantheau, who moved to Berea from Maryland about three years ago, is a member of Sustainable Berea, which organized the festival. “Every downspout without a rain barrel is a wasted opportunity,” he said. “If 2,000 of these 55-gallon barrels are filled 10 times, that represents over 1 million gallons of water.”
As he proclaimed Rain Barrel Festival Day, Berea Mayor Steve Connelly said the city’s municipal utility pumps 3.5 milion gallons of water each day.
“It takes surprising little rain to fill one of these barrels,” said Sustainable Berea member Donna Wellman. “Even runoff from the dew that collects on your roof will help fill a rain barrel.”
The festival promoters do not suggest drinking rain-barrel water. “You can use rain-barrel water to irrigate your flowers and vegetable garden,” Wellman said. Sustainable Berea also promotes home gardens.
Both painted and unpainted barrels sold quickly. Unpainted barrels were sold to members of Sustainable Berea for $45 and to non-members for $55. Memberships could be purchased for $25. “We sold 63 unpainted barrels in the first 40 minutes,” Wellman said. About 65 painted barrels were sold in both a live and a silent auction, with bidding starting at $65. The live auction sold 25 barrels in 50 minutes.
A barrel painted by members of the Kentucky Native Plant Society went for $300, the top price in the live auction.
Many barrels were painted with nature scenes, such as flowers, trees, butterflies, streams and fish.
“This is a flower barrel, not a flour barrel,” said auctioneer John Gilliam, as he prepared to auction a barrel painted with a floral design.
In addition to conservation groups, barrels were submitted by art, church, civic and youth groups. To defray their costs, 75 percent of the sale price went to the group which bought and painted the barrels.
Richard Olson of Sustainable Berea’s board of directors called the festival a success. “We’ve had a great turnout despite the threat of rain, and everyone is in great spirits,” he said. Olson also was pleased to see numerous other conservation groups set up educational exhibits for the festival.
Berea College, the Kentucky Division of Water, the Kentucky RiverKeeper, the Kentucky Environmental Foundation, Kentucky Watershed Watch, Appalachia – Science in the Public Interest and The Head of Three Rivers Project were among the participating organizations.
Several focused more on pure water than water supply.
The Watershed Watch group recruits and trains volunteers to collect water samples and submit them to state authorities for testing. The Kentucky, Cumberland and Big Sandy rivers all have headwaters in Letcher County, said Sam Adams of The Head of Three Rivers Projects. He displayed a sample of acid water runoff from a coal mine. It had eaten holes in the fingers of vinyl gloves soaked in the water.
For more details, visit the Web site sustainableberea.org.
Bill Robinson can be reached at brobinson@richmondregister.com or at 623-1669, Ext. 267.
Local News
Art work brightens up Rain Barrel Festival
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Friday at library : Lecturer to portray founder of Berea
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As the son of a slave-holding father, Fee witnessed firsthand the benefits of having slaves and the profits that could be made from their labor. When he graduated from college and enrolled in Lane Theological Seminary, he began to understand the inherent wrong and destructiveness of slavery. -
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The accident took place about 7 p.m. at the junction of Maple Grove Road and KY 363 south of London, as Johnson was attempting to turn onto the state highway.
Laurel County Chief Deputy Eddy Sizemore said Johnson’s Chevrolet Cavalier pulled out in front of a Dodge Durango driven by Charles Joseph, 19, that was traveling south on KY 363.
After being extricated from her vehicle, Johnson was transported to St. Joseph-London hospital, where she was pronounced dead.
Joseph also was transported to the hospital, where he was treated for minor injuries, according to the accident report. -
Finally February
Ian Rosser, an Eastern Kentucky University student from Lexington, clears snow from his car parked on campus Wednesday
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The Appalachian Foothills Therapeutic Equestrian Center will be hosting two, one-day volunteer training workshops for those interested in helping others with special needs.
The volunteer orientation days will be Friday and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., but only one day of training is required, according to Mark Martin who co-owns Appalachian Foothills Therapeutic Equestrian Center (AFTEC) with his wife Cheryl.
The all-volunteer organization, which is based in Jackson County, uses horses to help humans deal with physical and emotional challenges. -
Man accused of holding samurai sword to girlfriend’s throat
A Madison grand jury will hear the case of a man accused of threatening to cut his girlfriend’s head off, and attacking her father with a samurai sword.
Russell M. Masters, 42, of Richmond, is charged with two counts of first-degree wanton endangerment, which is a Class D felony, and fourth-degree assault (domestic violence with minor injury) and resisting arrest, which both are Class A misdemeanors. Masters could receive one to five years in prison on each wanton endangerment charge, and the misdemeanors both carry a maximum sentence of one year in jail. -
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The complainant said the belongings had gone missing sometime between August and October. -
US 25 business owners scared of five-lane plan
Voices of Berea business owners upset about upcoming construction on US 25 will be taken to the state level, according to city administrator Randy Stone.
Several people operating businesses along a section of US 25 gave comments Tuesday to the Berea City Council, asking them reconsider plans to widen the road to five lanes.
The design is a five-lane highway with a center turn lane and a 10-foot shared use path on one side and a 5-foot sidewalk on the other side. -
Grand jury to hear copper theft case
The attorney for a man accused of stealing copper from a handful of electric poles questioned his identification as the same person who took copper from 32 poles two days earlier.
Public defender Meena Mohanty questioned Richmond police officer Nicholas Duvall during a preliminary hearing Wednesday in Madison District Court. Her client, Jeffrey W. Nester, 46, of Fourth Street, was arrested in connection with a Jan. 23 copper theft. He is charged with second-degree criminal mischief, theft by unlawful taking, possession of burglary tools and failure to notify address change to the Department of Transportation. These charges are all misdemeanors that, at most, carry a sentence of one year in prison. -
Judge weighs constitutionality of legislative redistricting
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Franklin County Circuit Judge Phillip Shepherd said he expects to enter a ruling in the case by mid-week.
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Couple recovering from injuries suffered in weekend house fire
A couple was hospitalized after their home was set ablaze Sunday by a spark from a cigar, according to a county fire official.
County Fire Chief Jim Cox said the city and county fire departments were called to the home at 111 Concord Road in the early afternoon. Waco Volunteer Fire Department and the Richmond Fire Department also responded.
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