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West Stockbridge is preparing this Saturday's annual Zucchini Festival, a celebration of the versatile green squash.

West Stockbridge Gearing Up for Zucchini Fest

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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West Stockbridge will be filled with zucchini on Saturday so don't leave your car unlocked.

WEST STOCKBRIDGE, Mass. — Zucchini, courgette, summer squash — whatever you call it.  West Stockbridge will be full of the vegetable (or fruit) on Saturday.

Volunteers are busy preparing homemade booths, decorations, games, and more for the annual Zucchini Festival from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. The first was held in 2003, ran for a decade, and then went on hiatus until it was brought back last year.

Sponsored by the West Stockbridge Cultural Council, the festival has drawn thousands to the town's center over the years and is a testament to its tight-knit community. Chris Powell, one of the many hands who make it happen, explained that the actual event and the preparations unite people from near and far in a special way.

"It's just a bunch of people coming together when they can and kind of meeting everyone where they're at too, what they can put into it, and it's just super fun in that way," he said.

It will kick off with a pet parade where zucchini costumes are encouraged if temperatures aren't too high. Lucky Bucket will end the night playing classic rock, oldies, country, blues, and soul beneath fireworks.  

In between, attendees can enter a zucchini weigh-off or decorating contest, a "zuck" river race, a baking contest, and a poetry contest among many more. These are said to be "quintessential" to the event.

There will also be a food court with vendors offering one to two zucchini-themed options along with their usual fare. Downtown businesses are also participating.

It is free and for all ages, with tickets for games and activities available for purchase. Powell noted that Zucchini Festival merchandise is cash only.

You may be wondering, "Why zucchini?" There are a few legends about the origin of the festival's mascot — the most amusing involving a car being filled with them.

In the early 2000s, the Cultural Council was looking to host a large community event that brought people together in the downtown but didn't have a theme.

"The legend is like, there is a period of time in the summer in West Stockbridge that if you left your car unlocked, someone would come down and fill it with zucchini and that happened one time after one of these meetings, a local in town went downtown and someone's car was unlocked and it was filled with zucchini, and they came out and they were like, 'You know what, let's do zucchini as the theme,'" Powell said.



"And I also think that there are a number of different reference points and things that just kind of coincided, leading everyone to zucchini."

He added that it is a fun word, an abundant crop, and an easy thing to get creative with. The town also has a history of having Italian and Italian American populations.

Powell's mother, Marjorie Powell, is the lead organizer and he has been involved since the festival's inception. It is a "labor of love" for the community, as it is 100 percent organized and run by volunteers, neighbors, and friends and proceeds go right back into a fund for the event.

"That's one of the things that motivates me to jump back in because it's just an especially unique thing and to be doing all of it around something that's really just for the sake of doing," he said.

"All of the proceeds and everything from the festival, from merchandise and the tickets for the games, go directly back into the Zucchini Festival fund. It's kind of like a thing that is meant to perpetuate itself for the experience of it all."

He said his mother and all the other volunteers put in a great deal of time. There are usually around 100 volunteers behind the event each year.

"My mom is so invested in in the festival being this community event," he added. "She does just an amazing job putting together all these logistics."

The town celebrates its 250th anniversary this year. In 1774, the General Court in Boston passed an act to establish the Town of West Stockbridge after five years of effort and its first town meeting was held on July 4 of that year.

This was kept in mind as Powell made the image for this year's festival, which shows a fossil of the "Archaeozucchini, est. 250 million yrs-old, Early Mesozucchic Period."

Depot Street will be closed from Friday at 6 p.m. through 4:30 p.m. on Saturday. Center Street will be closed from 4:30 to 11 p.m. Free parking will be available at the Town Offices on State Line Road and the Card Pond parking lot on Route 41, and the municipal parking lot next to Main Street with shuttles running every 15-20 minutes.  

A full schedule and more information can be found on wszucchinifest.org.


Tags: community event,   festival,   

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Lee Celebrates Kickoff of New Public Safety Building with Demo

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

The new complex to be built on this site will hold the Fire, Police and EMS. 

LEE, Mass. — Town officials celebrated the start of a new public safety building on Tuesday by demolishing the Airoldi building and former Department of Public Works building.

"We're starting to take down the Airoldi building, which served as a municipal office building for the last few decades, we've had Tri-Town Health here some of our state representatives had have offices here, the DPW, we've had elections in this building and also was a former ambulance garage," Town Administrator Christopher Brittain said. "So, it served a number of purposes over the years."

The nearby Quonset hut that used to house the DPW is also expected to be taken down, clearing the property for a 37,661-square-foot building that will house the Police and Fire departments, and emergency medical services.

Brittain said this is a historic event for the town.

"This will kind of mark the first real work being done," he said. "We've been in the planning stages for almost two years between town meetings and bonds and things that we had to do and votes and now we are actually starting to see some things happening."

In 2023, voters endorsed nearly $37 million in borrowing, which included the purchase of property and relocating the DPW, during a special town meeting. The facility's cost is estimated to fall below $35 million and back in October the town received $1 million in federal funding toward construction.

Brittain said many factors went into the decision for a public safety building as the fire station building is too small and not up to today's standards.

"We're working right now out of three buildings, we're going to reduce that to two. The two up here on Main Street, the first one we occupied in 1911, it was built for two horse-drawn pieces of apparatus, we currently have four motorized pieces of apparatus in it and we're crammed in there like sardines," Fire Chief Ryan Brown said.

"The efficiency of operation is definitely impacted negatively. Our offices are in the building next door so we're not in the same building as our equipment, but we make it work."

The fire station, built in 1912, was found to be structurally unsound and inadequate to support modern-day equipment and the 1,600 square-foot police station falls significantly short of the 10,960 square feet of space that is required to accommodate the force.

The police building is located at 32 Main St., the same building as Town Hall.

"We're working out of such an antiquated facility that's on multiple floors from a best practice standpoint. It's very difficult to serve our community and it's just not efficient and there's liability issues there's safety issues and that's what we currently have," said Police Chief Craig DeSantis.

"It's hopefully going to accommodate future growth for these departments for 20 or more years into the future which is exciting," said Select Board member Sean Regnier. "This is an area of town that something needed to happen to improve it. It's right on the river, sort of off Main Street … and it's something that's going to be front and center in town to show off our public safety."

Regnier said the board has identified that the facilities were lacking a lot when he was first elected in 2020.

"So this is really kind of a kickoff of the process," he said.

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