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Hate weeding? Engineering student helping startup devise solution

Mechanical engineering major Max Prescott stands in front of entrance of Rist Urban Agriculture Farm
Mechanical engineering major Max Prescott has been putting the solar-powered Tertill garden weeding robot to the test at the Rist Urban Agriculture Farm on East Campus.

On a sunny Friday afternoon in early December,  major Max Prescott takes notes as he watches a solar-powered garden weeding robot, about the size of a waffle maker, whir up a dirt incline at the Rist Urban Agriculture Farm on East Campus.

Prescott is testing the robot鈥檚 performance on slopes as part of his internship with , a startup company based in North Billerica, Massachusetts. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely a one-of-a-kind internship,鈥 says Prescott, a junior from Dunstable, Massachusetts, who has been interning with Tertill since last spring. 鈥淚t's nice to have a well-rounded internship that has hands-on applications.鈥

Equipped with a small, spinning weed whacker on its underside and sensors to help it navigate around a framed-in garden bed, the Tertill robot bears a striking resemblance to Roomba, the popular autonomous vacuum made by Bedford, Massachusetts-based iRobot. That鈥檚 no surprise, considering that Tertill was co-founded by Joe Jones, who was iRobot鈥檚 first full-time hire and helped invent the Roomba.

Jones launched Tertill via Kickstarter in 2017 and began selling the gardening robots online two years later. In September 2020, iRobot鈥檚 co-founder and former president, Helen Greiner, joined Tertill as CEO. The company has been featured in Forbes, the Wall Street Journal and Better Homes and Gardens, and sales of the $349 robot jumped more than 600% in 2020, according to Greiner.

Tertill intern Max Prescott takes notes on the robot's performance on a temporary test bed he built at the Rist Urban Agriculture Farm.
Tertill intern Max Prescott takes notes on the robot's performance on a temporary test bed he built at the Rist Urban Agriculture Farm.

Prescott landed the internship through a family friend who works for the company. He worked about 20 hours a week from home over the summer, testing the robot to determine the maximum area it can cover in his family鈥檚 garden (answer: about 200 square feet).

鈥淚 was scattering weed seeds all over the garden, scaling up the tests,鈥 says Prescott, who explains that Tertill distinguishes between weeds and plants based on their height (it comes with special collars to put around new plants less than an inch tall).

When he returned to campus this fall, Prescott went to the  and asked if he could continue with his testing at the Rist Urban Agriculture Farm. He was allowed to build a small test bed in the outdoor garden adjacent to the greenhouse and work there for several weeks.

鈥淚t鈥檚 great to see a student like Max working on real-world solutions right here on campus,鈥 says , executive director of the Rist Institute for Sustainability and Energy. 鈥淲hen we opened the greenhouse site four years ago, we envisioned it being used as a living lab for energy-efficient, sustainable agriculture projects such as this.鈥

Prescott, who plans to add a robotics minor, says he鈥檚 been able to apply what he鈥檚 learning in the classroom to his internship work, which he鈥檚 continued part-time during the school year.

Max Prescott shows a Tertill garden weeding robot to Suzzanne Cromwell, marketing and publicity coordinator for Mill City Grows, an urban farming nonprofit in Lowell.
Max Prescott shows a Tertill garden weeding robot to Suzzanne Cromwell, marketing and publicity coordinator for Mill City Grows, an urban farming nonprofit in Lowell.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of 3D modeling, SolidWorks design and even working with barrier-detecting sensors,鈥 he says. 鈥淎 lot of the work is related to classes I鈥檝e taken in thermodynamics and materials science. I鈥檝e even discussed some of the work I鈥檝e done with my professors.鈥

Prescott says he鈥檚 already been asked to stay on as an intern through this spring and summer, which he鈥檚 eager to do. He goes into the company鈥檚 North Billerica offices for weekly meetings with its dozen or so employees, and he enjoys the autonomy he鈥檚 given on projects.

鈥淭here aren鈥檛 a lot of strict guidelines when I get a project. They give me the opportunity to figure out how to get it done,鈥 he says.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of real-world applications that this internship has given me, which is really great,鈥 he adds. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 nice to be outside, soaking up the sun and getting some fresh air.鈥