Pacific Northwest's first Green Festival

by Tom Monahan

This article was originally published in April 2008

crowd

Green Festival celebrated its fourth year in Washington D.C. in October 2007 with an unprecedented event attendance of 31,000.

Saturday, April 12, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Sunday, April 13, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Washington State Convention & Trade Center
7th Avenue and Pike St., Seattle

See your PCC receipts for a special 2-for-1 ticket offer.

(April 2008) — With its focus on sustainability, Seattle is a natural place to host the nation’s largest “green” consumer show, the Green Festival, a joint project of Global Exchange and Co-op America. This green living event has been to three other U.S. cities — Washington D.C., San Francisco and Chicago — but this will be the festival’s first time in Seattle.

The Seattle Green Festival will feature more than 350 exhibits covering all aspects of sustainable “green” living. There will be booths on natural home and health products, solar panels, fairly traded gifts and crafts, organic food, green education, social investing, independent media, energy conservation, green power and climate action. The Green Festival also will feature more than 125 notable speakers.

PCC Natural Markets is honored to be the exclusive grocery sponsor of Seattle’s first Green Festival. We’ll have a strong presence with our PCC Cooks and Kid Picks programs, and Goldie Caughlan, PCC’s nutrition education manager, will offer a presentation on Sunday, April 13, starting at 12 p.m. The PCC Farmland Trust staff also will be on hand with an informational table.

For more information, visit www.greenfestivals.org. Also, check your PCC receipts for a special 2-for-1 ticket offer. Tickets will be $15, so be sure to take advantage of this special offer for PCC shoppers.

Also in this issue

A taste of place: exploring terroir

Article discusses the concept of terroir and how it relates to the PCC Farmland Trust. Also mentioned are simple ways to support the Trust and a thank you to this month's corporate partners.

Insights by Goldie: How sweet it isn't: GM sugar beets

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) — to its shame! — recently approved a request by Monsanto to increase by 5,000 percent the amount of the toxic herbicide (glyphosate) residues that sugar beets can contain. The roots are the storage unit and producers of the sugar! Now there’s a tasty treat for the kiddies.

Gather, eat, nourish

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