Voices

Why I shop locally

Online shopping adds to our carbon load through higher demand, extra packaging, and added transportation. It also eliminates the face-to-face transaction that sustains community.

NEWFANE — As much as possible, I shop locally - while I still can. But when the machine on which we rely for our daily bread recently came to the end of its life, I shopped online for a replacement.

None were available from the manufacturers, and every big-box store was out of stock. Without much choice, I bought it at Amazon.

And, while checking out, I was tricked into a 30-day free trial of Prime, the company's premium membership service.

I don't like shopping online, I especially don't like buying from Amazon, I certainly don't like being tricked into Prime, and I don't patronize stores where I have to pay to get in.

So I clicked and clicked and clicked some more until I could cancel my inadvertent Prime account.

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Despite the so-called convenience, shopping online damages the local economy. Amazon doesn't employ local workers and pays no local taxes. I'd rather shop downtown, where I've come to know the local merchants, where I can inspect the merchandise before I purchase it, and where I receive great service from people I've come to know. These things matter to me.

So here's my guide to the Brattleboro shops that provide me with almost everything I need.

Sam's Outdoor Outfitters, the source of most of my clothes, both for outdoor adventure and for sitting at my desk. This season, I bought a new pair of jeans. The sizing of women's clothing is one of the great mysteries of the universe. With help from sales staff I've come to know over the years, I tried on seven styles in three sizes before I found a pair that fit. How do you do that online?

In the last few years, other items I've purchased at Sam's with help from their knowledgeable staff include a backpack adjusted to my frame that I tried on (loaded with weights) before purchasing; lined leather gloves for handing firewood; a scope for my hunting rifle; yoga attire; a wool dress; and my first-ever hunting license.

• When I'm not outdoors, I'm reading. Ever since we ran out of shelf space, I've tried to limit how many new-to-us books come into the house. That doesn't stop my husband, Tim, from buying books at local, charitable sales. This year, he bought at least one of the books we donated. Oops.

But reading is central to life, and if I need a book I don't already own or can't find at a library, I can buy it at Everyone's Books. If they don't have it, they can get it for me in a matter of days. It's also where I buy almost all holiday gifts that I don't make.

So when I hear a review of a new book about brewing, baking, or food, I order it for my son-outlaw (chosen to become an in-law next year) who likes to study food and drink almost as much as he likes to prepare it. Likewise, I buy history books as gifts for the son-outlaw. And any good novel or collection of poetry purchased for one daughter gets passed around to the others - and to Tim and me.

• For household necessities, there's Brown and Roberts. My most recent purchases there include a new hammer handle to replace the one I broke, an enamelware kettle for heating water on top of the wood stove, and small loaf pans for baking holiday gifts.

If I were going to make a list of things for a Santa to bring me, it would include cord to replace my sagging clothesline, but I'll probably just buy that myself in the spring.

Brown and Roberts is stuffed with useful items, and the people who work there know where it all is or can special-order it. If they don't have it, I probably don't need it, unless it has to do with running the farm.

• For gardening and animal husbandry, there's Agway.

All of these places sell any number of useful, practical, and well-crafted objects that would make great gifts to which the recipient could apply the adage attributed to Vermont's own Calvin Coolidge: “Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without.”

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Our consumerism - all year long, not just during the holidays - comes with a heavy carbon load, from manufacturing and packaging to transportation. Buying online doesn't just increase that load through higher demand, extra packaging, and added transportation, but it also eliminates the face-to-face transaction that makes shopping not just an exchange of money for goods and services.

Every local purchase is a social transaction as well: an investment from which we all benefit, providing tax revenue and all the social benefits of a vibrant marketplace close to home.

I hope you'll shop close to home this year - and in the year to come.

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