Annual Boat & Home Show Goes Green
Thursday, July 25th 2019
The Maine Boat & Home Show, August 9-11, 2019, in Rockland, Maine, has implemented a fleet of new initiatives this year as part of an ongoing effort to become a Zero Waste event. Many exhibitors at the show also will feature products designed to promote greener living.
Initiatives at this year’s show include cutting way back on paper mailings and packets, moving to digital ticketing, and reusing exhibitor badge holders, as well as composting as much waste as possible generated by the show, said show organizer John K. Hanson, Jr.
"We've been moving for a long time toward a goal of being a low-impact event,” he said. “We’ve gotten rid of plastic wristbands at the entry gates. We've got reusable exhibitor lanyards too, thanks to Rock Harbor Brewing, and in the Awlgrip Exhibitor Lounge the water bottles are recyclable and returnable.”
ScrapDogs Community Compost, a local operation that collects food and yard waste from midcoast Maine residents and businesses, will be on site at the show this year both to educate show goers and to collect compostable garbage. They process the waste into compost, and then sell the finished product locally. “So you don't need to have your own compost bin--they will do it for you,” Hanson said.
Davis Saltonstall, co-founder of ScrapDogs with Tessa Rosenberry, said the pair approached the show knowing that a significant amount of waste is generated when you have thousands of folks enjoying one location over a weekend
“It seemed a perfect showcase for us to help reduce that, and also spread the word about the joys and benefits of composting,” he said.
There will be special ScrapDogs food-waste collection receptacles in place for commercial and public use, which will be emptied daily.
“Then we’ll take these organic materials away from the event site and compost them. Some attendees and exhibitors may be unfamiliar with composting, but we’ll be on hand all weekend to coach them regarding what materials are accepted in compost containers,” Saltonstall said.
ScrapDogs will have a booth near the Food Court where they will answer questions, as well as offer a fun recycling game for the younger attendees.”
Greener Wakes
A sizable segment of exhibitors will also have environmentally conscious offerings on hand. On the sailing front, Maine Cat, known for its high-performance composite sailing multihulls built in Bremen, has partnered with E-TECH Electric Drives, manufacturer of electric propulsion drives with hydroelectric generation. Maine Cat’s MC 38 LS-E can make its own clean electric power while sailing with the drives. The individually crafted Pisces 21 by Classic Boat Shop offers an optional inboard electric drive equipped with either two AGM batteries or a Lithium Ion battery and fast charger.
Speaking of propulsion, attendees won't want to miss the Maine Ocean School’s cordless canoes. As part of a summer session before the show, MOS students will design and build a vessel, then power it with two 18-volt cordless electric power-tool heads. Show-goers can learn all about it at the MOS booth in Area A. There will also be an on-water demonstration on the boat docks on Saturday afternoon.
Then there’s the diesel-electric steamship America, which will be on the Icon Dock all day on Friday. The vessel is nearly 59 feet long, yet propulsion comes from two 60-Kw electric drives while two diesel generators charge the battery bank. It is similar to a hybrid car, but the combustion engines charge batteries instead of turning the props directly. America was built from a bare hull using repurposed materials, including wood from discarded parts of houses and buildings.
Keeping a classic yacht in top shape is a wonderful example of "reuse." Lyman-Morse Boatbuilding will have a beauty on the docks inBevinda, a 36′ custom-built flybridge downeaster built in 1990 that is ready for a new owner.
Gray & Gray Yachts will also have a bevy of previously loved classics on show.
Another "recycling" option is to donate a well-loved vessel to the likes of Maritime Funding Association of Maine. They will be on hand to help owners donate their no-longer-used boats to generate money for a host of Maine nonprofits. It's a win-win: the owner gets a tax break and the nonprofits get much-needed funding.
Greener Homes
Maine Energy Systems, which specializes in wood-pellet boilers and furnaces, will be in Outdoor West. Built in Bethel, Maine, their boiler design was acquired from ÖkoFEN, a world leader in automatic wood pellet boiler design and technology. MES’s mission is to inspire a transition to renewable, stably priced, carbon-neutral wood-pellet fuel for heating homes and businesses.
The heating system is important, but so is keeping the heat inside the building. That’s where energy-efficient replacement windows such as those offered by Renewal by Anderson (in Tent F), can come in.
Three generations of furniture and cabinetmaking craftsmanship come together at Couture Home + Design to create projects that blend wood, metal, stone, and even Maine lobster shells. Legare Cuyler at Cuyler Made will show work that includes unique chairs made from repurposed traditional wooden lobster trap parts sourced from Nova Scotia. Both will be in Tent J, as will Studio J-Bone with sculptures of reclaimed and recycled metals.
Big Ship Salvage will be back in Outdoor North with a selection of recycled brass and bronze ship fittings: portlights, lamp fixtures, binnacles, antique engine telegraphs, signal flags, and who-knows-what other intriguing goodies.
Project Puffin will have a booth in Tent G, where show-goers can learn about the organization’s ongoing efforts to preserve habitat for this personable seabird. While out in nature, insect-repellent clothing can be crucial, and Dog Not Gone has offerings for both pets and their people.
Visitors are reminded that the City of Rockland no longer allows single-use plastic bags. Options available at the show include the sturdy carry-alls from Sea Bags, which crafts its totes from recycled sails, or a multi-purpose tool bag from Nantucket Bagg.
Greener Land Transport
For a dozen years or so, Stanley Subaru, the exclusive Vespa and Piaggio Dealer in Maine, has brought a colorful fleet of swift, energy-efficient scooters to the show. This a fuel-efficient mode of travel nicely complements other more methods of transportation—a scooter aboard a yacht? Why not?
The 17th Annual MAINE BOAT & HOME Show will take place August 9-11, 2019 at Harbor Park, in Rockland. Held annually on the second weekend in August on the waterfront in Rockland, the event attracts thousands of discerning attendees from all over the country and world. The three-day event is also Maine’s only in-the-water boat show.
Admission: Adult tickets $15, available at the gates and online. Kids under 12 get in free. Special Access Passes, which include parking and other perks, also available. Gates open at 10 a.m. daily.
For more information and to purchase tickets, visit maineboats.com/boatshow or call 800-565-4951. The show was founded in 2003 by Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors magazine.