Friday, August 30, 2013

Chili Cookoff Contest at Vermont Pumpkin Chuckin'

Chili Cook-off at Vermont Pumpkin Chuckin' Festival
There will be a savory #ChiliCookoff contest at this year's Vermont Pumpkin Chuckin' Festival, Sunday, September 29th, 2013.

Celebrity Judges/People's Choice Hybrid Chili Cookoff Contest

Currently we have 8 celebrity judges lined up:
  • JB McKinley: Editor of News and Citizen
  • Latan Detore: Stowe Attorney
  • David Stackpole: Stowe Attorney
  • Bobby and Alice Roberts: Mountain Associates Realtors
  • Chris Jordan: Morrison's Cafeteria Manager for 40 years in Fort Lauderdale and Tampa, FL
  • Kyle Midura: WCAX TV
  • Biddle Duke: Owner of Stowe Reporter
  • Chris Francis (owner of Ye Olde England Inne)
Each of these judges will do a blind sample of each competitors chili and get 10 votes for Gold, Silver and Bronze. Each festival participant will pay $5 for a similar sample and get 1 vote for Gold, Silver and Bronze. At the end, the votes are counted and the Gold winner receives a trophy and $100, Silver gets a trophy and $50, Bronze gets a trophy and $25,

Neil Handwerger, the owner of Cafe On Main in Stowe, has graciously agreed to run the chili cookoff. I"m sure it will involve a lot of work and planning, with no financial reward, so please stop in at his wonderful cafe on Main St. Stowe for breakfast or lunch. Also he is the guy to contact for questions and registration. So far we've only got two three entries, so spread the word.

Entries so far:
  • Rich Hobbs: Owner of Sunset Grill, Stowe
  • Regina Crosby: Owner of Stowe Barber Shop
  • Deb Papineau (Owner of Deb's Place in Morrisville)
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#ChiliCookoff Rules:
  1. Contact Neil Handwerger via email to register or ask questions: email: cafeonmainstowe@gmail.com
  2. Each competitor must supply 2 gallons of chili to be judged by the celebrity and non-celebrity judges.
  3. Entry is free for the competitor and up to 4 of his team to the competition and festival. Any more than 5 in a team will be charged $5 to get into the festival.
  4. No electricity or tents will be provided. Portable burners are allowed. Update: we will be able to provide electricity.
  5. Event goes on rain or shine, so come prepared with a canopy.
  6. Seating: Not provided, bring your own, if desired.
  7. Bowls and spoons and samplers will be provided.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Launching a Trebuchet Syrah

Nothing goes together like a good syrah wine and a humongous trebuchet.

A syrah is a dark-skinned grape that is used to produce a red wine. The Journey's End Vineyards near Cape Town, South Africa had a massive 12 ton trebuchet built in England to celebrate the launch of their new Trebuchet Syrah wine. Here their big treb, currently nicknamed Dionysus, hurls a car, an old church organ, and a bomb with ease.

The 'petrol bomb' thing is crazy, but anyway, you can get in on the fun and win a case of wine in their 'Name the Trebuchet' contest.

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Journey's End Vineyards:

Has the launch of a new wine ever been taken so literally?

Rollo Gabb, owner of Journey's End Vineyards has has commissioned a full-scale version of the fabled medieval siege weapon -- the trebuchet -- to be built to coincide with the launch of the winery's 2008 vintage syrah.

The Trebuchet - who has thus far been nicknamed Dionysus by Journey's End fans on twitter - is an 60ft, 12-tonne machine that can hurl an old church organ, a car and old oak barrels several hundred yards.

Mr Gabb, whose family owns and runs the winery at Sir Lowry's Pass, near Stellenbosch, said he hoped the trebuchet would yield financial benefits for the community local to the award-winning vineyard, as well as put its name to a first class wine.

'Combining old knowledge and methods with modern technology is something that fascinates me, and it seemed to suit our 2008 Syrah down to the ground,' said Mr Gabb. 'It is a powerful and exciting wine, with great structure -- much like the machine it is named after'.

The single vineyard Syrah is from Journey's End vineyard that was planted in 1998. The South West facing block sits on decomposed granite on the famed Schapenberg Hills overlooking False Bay.

The wine is priced at £12.99 is available from Tanner's Wine Merchant.
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Journey's End sales & mktg director Rollo Gabb, the #trebuchet 2008 Syrah and the machine
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Another Youtube view -- 'petrol bomb' + Syrah Trebuchet = crazy:

Big Bang for Trebuchet Syrah 2008

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On April 2nd 2013 we embarked on the ambitious project of constructing a 60 ft. tall, 12.4 ton medieval trebuchet.

Three 140ft tall Douglas Fir trees were carefully selected and felled at the Dudmaston Estate, near Bridgnorth in Shropshire, as England endured a prolonged winter freeze.

The steelwork for our machine was carefully laser cut on Monday 13th May at Marshbrook in Shropshire and works continue to have the machine ready for a trial launch on 23rd JUNE.

Once ready for assembly our trebuchet will be erected at Acton Round, Nr Bridgnorth, Shropshire and the launch will be celebrated by chucking the currently defunct organ out of the local church.

Following launch we will be taking down this magnificent engine and packing her into a 40ft container for shipment to the Journeys End Wine Estate in Stellenbosch, South Africa. Here she will hopefully enjoy a life in warmer climes and be utilised to raise funds for our local community of Sir Lowrys Pass Village.
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NAME OUR TREBUCHET AND WIN
 
In the medieval times these magnificent machines of war were given nicknames. Names at the time included ‘WARWOLF’, ‘GODS STONE THROWER’ and ‘BAD NEIGHBOUR’

Please send in any name suggestions to trebuchet@journeysend.co.za ... the Top 10 names Drawn on 31st September 2013 will each win a case of Trebuchet Syrah !

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PS: Our name suggestion was "Sir Lowry's Thunder". It is based on where the Trebuchet will live, Sir Lowry's Pass Village, South Africa, and who Sir Gailbraith Lowry Cole was.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Make'n A Pumpkin Crab

We have soft spot for Jim McKenzie's Pumpkin Crab. He launched a KickStarter to make some. Great video of an up and coming artist in action.

 KickStarter:
Jim McKenzie's Pumpkin Crab Resin Art Figurine

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Trebuchet Song

Spring is in the air. It's time to plant your pumpkin seeds and continue the circle of life. Here is a song about the unique combination of gardening, pumpkins, and trebuchets.


There are now 148 days until the 5th Vermont Pumpkin Chuckin' Festival, on Sunday, September 29th, 2013, at the Stoweflake Resort in Stowe, Vermont.

Saturday, February 16, 2013

4th Annual Vermont Pumpkin Chuckin' Festival Video

Apple Dannie of First Run Productions and Leonard Osterberg of Technically Leonards produced a first-rate video showing the sights and sounds of the 4th Annual Vermont Pumpkin Chuckin' Festival. The festival that was held on Sunday, October 7th, 2012, at the Boyden Family Farm, Cambridge, VT.

If you were at the festival you will probably see yourself here.

Monday, December 17, 2012

Building a Monster Medieval Trebuchet: Warwolf

Warwolf Trebuchet

If you missed seeing PBS's NOVA story about building a replica of the legendary medieval trebuchet, Warwolf, be sure to check out the photo log for that show. The show was first aired back on February 1st, 2000.
NARRATOR: 200 years before cannon appeared in Europe, chroniclers make reference to what appears to be the ultimate 13th century siege weapon - an ingenious new form of heavy artillery that flung huge stone balls with such destructive power that castle walls were reduced to rubble. But no ancient weapon of this type has survived. Were such claims gross exaggerations, or did such a weapon really exist? To answer these questions, NOVA brings together a team of experts in medieval warfare who believe they know the secret.

JOEL MCCARTY: It's chaos. It's Wednesday, I think. I don't have a clue whether or not we'll finish.

NARRATOR: Their task - to build siege machines capable of destroying a castle wall at a range of about 200 yards...
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The plan: NOVA and a team of master builders from England, Germany, France and the United States will reconstruct one of the most destructive of medieval weapons ever made: a giant trebuchet. They will raise the weapon in the shadows of Castle Urquhart, located on the shores of Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands.

This is one of the castles that English armies attacked during Edward I's Scottish campaign 700 years ago. As part of the campaign, the army was said to have built one of the most monstrous trebuchets ever. Only its name survives: Warwolf.
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PBS Nova builds a medieval trebuchet
In examining medieval drawings of trebuchets, mechanical engineer Wayne Neel, a professor from Virginia Military Institute, can't help but notice that many are represented with wheels.

He decides to add what is one of history's most fundamental inventions to his second prototype. To nearly everyone's surprise, the wheeled trebuchet shoots about one-third farther than its fixed counterpart.
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Trebuchet builders gather at Castle Urquhart, located on the shores of Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands

Almost overnight, this Scottish field is turned into a medieval construction site. Timber framers, stonemasons, carpenters and blacksmiths turn back time and employ medieval building techniques to construct two giant trebuchets. One design features a fixed counterweight and wheels; the other is wheel-less and is loaded with a swinging counterweight.

Observes Marcus Brandt, an on-site carpenter: "If it weren't for the jets flying overhead, you'd think you were in the 12th century." ....
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Sources:
NOVA Online / Secrets of Lost Empires:
Medieval Siege -- NOVA Builds a Trebuchet

Show Transcript: "Secrets of Lost Empires: Medieval Siege"
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Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Inferno Pics

We posted a bunch of great photos courtesy of Kim Brown, from Team Dante's Inferno, over on Facebook. They were taken at the 4th VT pumpkin Chuckin' Festival, October 7th, 2012, and show the competing trebuchets...

Team Dante's Inferno
Team Dante's Inferno

Trebuchet at VTPC #4
Bad Boomer the red treb

Friday, October 12, 2012

Siege of the Pumpkin Masters

Here is an interesting pre-festival article from The Transcript, the local Morrisville paper, that was published on October 4th, 2012. Republished with the permission of J.B. McKinley, editor.
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The Transcript - Serving the People of Lamoille County with News Since 1881

Siege of the Pumpkin Masters
4th Annual Vermont Pumpkin Chuckin' Festival in Cambridge draws cloaks, crowds and competitors from around New England and New York

by Adam Howard

SUNY Plattsburg - Dr. Ken Podolak - Physics Faculty
Ask Dr. Ken Podolak if he played Dungeons and Dragons as a kid and he'll stop you before you can say chainmail. "I've always been into this stuff," he says from his office on the campus of SUNY Plattsburgh where he's a professor of physics and the advisor for the Physics and Engineering Club. "This is what it's all about."

In this case, this it isn't about bards or long swords, plate armor or crossbows. It's about the trebuchet ­ that medieval throwback that shaped a thousand years of warfare by, well, chucking stuff hard, far and even on fire. But, today, we're talking vegetables: More precisely, pumpkins. On Sunday, October 7th at 11 a.m. Podolak, 32, a half dozen of his students and a few hundred nerdcores from around the Northeast will lay siege to a field at the Boyden Farm in Cambridge. And for the team that chucks the fruit the farthest over three tries: All the Gothic glory, a trophy, some schwag and a ton of fun. It sounds simple, chucking stuff. But this is way more than roll playing say those who go about designing and building trebuchets.

"There's no motor on the devise to throw the projectile," Podolak says. "So, it's all bout carefully designing the pivot point and where the pin goes. Ours is a 'floating arm' design and the weight is allowed to drop vertically downward, not swinging." (see photo at bottom of page)

Prof. Podolak's pumpkin chucking (range of projectile) equation
He's even got an equation for how far a pumpkin travels.

"You know, the big reason we do this every year," Podolak says, "is it gives a physical representation to what we learn in class. You could build widgets or read textbooks, but this is really hands-on and fun. Plus it's for a good cause."

All proceeds from the nominal parking fee go toward Cambridge Area Rotary's charitable outreach and the Lamoille Family Center.

The ten-student SUNY Plattsburg team returns to defend its Middleweight Open Division title (see rules) from last year where their longest chuck was 130 feet. The students have spend three full weekends rendering their trebuchet which Podolak believes could exceed last year's record.

While there are several other universities travelling to Cambridge from around New England, according to Chuckin' Founder Dave Jordan, of Morrisville, building a trebuchet has become a popular family affair too.

The 'Super Stunners' Stunners”—a team made up of father Brian Jadus and son Alex, 7,and Jeff Marvin and his son seven-year-old Kyle—from Williston return with their trebuchet their trebuchet 'Vegetable Splatter˛ to defend their Lightweight Division title from 2011. The Jadus family had such a blast last year that, this year, mother Tammy and nine-year-old Victoria have entered an all girl team to go up against the boys.
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2011 Champions
Seven-year-olds Alex Jadus and Kyle Marvin will be back with “Super Stunners” to defend their Lightweight Division crown this Sunday at the Boyden Farm. 
Tammy Jadus photo
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"Brian, Victoria and myself made several adjustments to our trebuchet Hades is Here," Tammy says. "We are hoping to get greater distance than last year, which was around 35' to 40'. We may make 50' if all goes according to plan. These trebuchets are very tuned, one small error and your results vary. Hopefully this year it will be team Hades is Here holding a trophy."

Gates open at 11 a.m. with the first of three rounds getting underway at noon. Miss Vermont, Chelsea Ingram (of Fox 44 Weather), will be on hand to sing the National Anthem, and rumor has it she'll be dressed as Joan of Arc.

The Lamoille Family Center has tons of games for the kids and Rotary members will be chuckin' burgers and dogs all afternoon.
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According to Vermont Pumpkin Chuckin' Dave Jordan, of Morrisville, the divisions were designed around the spirit of a Soap Box Derby. "The height and weight are limited to make it fair for teams with limited resources," he says. "The team that throws a pumpkin the farthest for their height will win best design prize and receive first pick of the prizes."
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SUNY Plattsburg FAT (floating arm trebuchet)
This ain’t your great, great, great, great, great, great grandfather’s trebuchet. This weekend’s entry from the SUNY Plattsburgh Physics and Engineering club features a “floating arm” and the counterweight drops vertically rather than swinging. 
Photo credit: Dr. Ken Podolak
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© 2012 The Transcript

15th Vermont Pumpkin Chuckin' Festival - Sept. 29th, 2024

15th Vermont Pumpkin Chuckin' Festival - Sept. 29th, 2024
15th Vermont Pumpkin Chuckin' Festival - Sunday, Sept. 29th, 2024