Vermont Public Radio

Vermont's NPR

  • RSS Feeds
  • Podcasts
  • Help Center
  • Contact

Support VPR Help pay for the programming you enjoy
Pledge Online

Eye On The Sky Weather



Current Conditions in Burlington International Airport

57° Skies A Few Clouds
Windchill 55 °
Wind East at 10 MPH

HD Radio Discount for VPR listeners

Learn more about this special offer

My Vermont

Audio and transcript of the My Vermont essays plus Vermont Edition coverage.

Learn more about My Vermont

VPR and NPR on your Phone

Get the latest updates from VPR and NPR news on your phone or Mobile device.

Learn about VPR Mobile

Vermont Edition

Vermont Edition brings you news and conversation about issues affecting your life - plus a bit of the unexpected.

Listen to Vermont Edition

Plant-A-Tree and the Global ReLeaf Campaign

Learn more about our partnership to plant-a-tree with American Forests.

Learn more

Join VPR at Fenway Park!

Unite your love for VPR and the Red Sox with a VPR trip to Fenway Park to see the Boston Red Sox play the Baltimore Orioles on Saturday, July 12th.

Learn more and get your tickets here

Celtic Music Tour of Ireland

Join VPR and All the Traditions host Robert Resnik for a musical tour of Ireland, September 4-15, 2008.

Join VPR in Ireland in September!

Commentary Series

Explore the archive of Commentaries by many of your favorite Vermonters.

VPR Commentary Series

Receive Our Newsletter

Commentary Series (VPR)

7:55am and 5:55pm Weekdays

«previous   next»

Tuesday May 6, 2008

My Vermont: Lali Cobb


I used to live in a place where people found it weird that I kept chickens.

How do you get eggs without a rooster?? they wondered.

What happens to all that...poop?? One woman actually worried that deer would come at night and eat my hens.

In Vermont, thank goodness, people are enlightened about critters. In my yoga class of ten, there are two shepherdesses, two women who keep goats, one who barters eggs for tuition (that's me), one who has donkeys, and one who raises turkeys. Vermonters understand that our relationship to the land is mediated by animals.

From the earthworm to the cow, critters keep the wheel of Nature turning: there are no vegetables without manure, no eggs or milk without vegetables. The Vermont landscape bears the centuries-old imprint of humanity and its retinue of helpful beasts. And if mankind is ever to achieve balance with Nature, Vermont may just be the model it needs.

Chickens on the prowl for cutworms; a wheelbarrow full of compost; a gardener weeding: this is my Vermont. In an era when most Americans have forgotten the history of the food they eat the cycle in Vermont continues for all to see, and be inspired by.

Related Links



«previous   next»
  • web tools supported by:
  • Contributing Listeners
Home More Streams VPR Classical VPR