Count me as one of the people who think it's reasonable to put your Bergey on a monopole. I've been a part of hanging 13' diameter turbines on Rohn monopoles (both 40 and 60' tall) with a tower diameter of 4" at the top. No failures in 30 years, so it is possible. The key, as pointed out before, is that there be some sort of taper to the pole. IIRC, Rohn did it by welding different diameters of tubing together. A larger unit (20' diameter) also was put up on a two piece hollow tapered 60" Combustion Engineering pole made out of Cor-Ten. We also used a foam foundation (!! pretty wild stuff) and the tower and machine still stand, 28 years later. Now, I don't suggest that you do that without engineering advice, but your Bergey is a fairly small machine, and with a bit of caution could be hung on a very tall light pole, which are available, used. Combustion Engineering was making 120' light poles (standards, they called 'em) and I think with some nosing around on manufacturer's sites and substituting your own thrust values, you could do a pretty good approximation of an engineering analysis, both for the tower and the foundation. I did an unrelated-to-wind project using a Lexington Standard pole and used their (EIA approved for wind loading) engineering procedure to arrive at an installation that met Uniform Building Code requirements, including foundation design complete with rebar schedule. So it's possible to get to a reasonable foundation without involving an engineer.
A Wincharger tower should be adequate for your Bergey. Rotor diameters are similar, and the 3 legged Wincharger towers (at least the ones I've seen) are overbuilt. Another possibility, if you're worried about blade clearance, is to put a short pipe/tubing extension, at the top of whatever self supporting tower you find. I don't remember what diameter tubing your Bergey requires as a mount, but using that as an extension would probably work.
So...I say, go for it, if that's what you want, and keep us posted! Sounds like an interesting project!
Neil