Thursday, July 22, 2010

An Apple a Day

There are always places that speak to us, that call to us, that whisper through our memories, our dreams, our hopes. A very Wordsworthian and romantic notion, I realize. And while I’ll admit that I’ve mused about a great many places over the years—Montana, Alaska, France, the Scottish Highlands, the Marquesas Islands, Australia, Italy, Greece, Fair Isle, Norway, Greenland, Mongolia (just to name a small few)—there is a place about which I’ve spent my entire life hearing.

My parents spent a little over a year in Bangor, Maine, in the mid-eighties and loved it: the New England atmosphere, the affable people, the lobster and fried haddock, the philly cheesesteak at the Whig and Courier, the cross-country skiing.

In the seven months I’ve been home, I’ve sent out over one hundred resumes, all to no avail. Perhaps it’s the job market; maybe it’s my less than impressive resume. After a lot of thought—and much resistance to the thought—I’ve decided to go back to school and pursue an MFA in Creative Writing with an emphasis in fiction. I love to write. It’s my passion, my adversary, my obsession. And I cannot think of anything I would rather spend my life doing than filling roomfuls of notebooks and countless documents on my laptop with the written word. There’s nothing more powerful than the word, but that’s a different tangent altogether.

I’ve missed the deadline to begin graduate school in the fall of this year, though, so I’ll begin applying in the next couple of months to several different schools for the 2011 fall term. In the meantime, I’m young, healthy, unattached, and debt-free. And I want an adventure.

Maine has been my current locus of fantasy. Lighthouses, saltbox houses, frigid and snowy winters, crisp falls, small towns, a craggy coastline. There aren’t too many jobs available in Maine, though. Unless one is a lobsterman or a logger—neither of which I possess the skills for. So I took a different approach and searched for seasonal jobs on farms in Maine. And I found this group called the Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association. MOFGA has an apprenticeship program in which one works for a farm affiliated with their group in exchange for room, board, and a small stipend. To make a long story shorter, I filled out an application on a whim and, in two weeks, I’ll be driving twenty-seven hours across the country to work on an apple orchard from August through November.

I’ll be living within miles of the very place to which E. B. White was referring when he said, “I live in a New England coastal town, somewhere between Nova Scotia and Cuba.” The couple I’ll be working for actually served as curators for his house years ago—it’s how they first became interested in preserving Maine’s heirloom apples.

Since I enjoy spinning a good yarn—fact or fiction—I thought I would create this blog to share with you some of my experiences over the next four months. I don’t know how regularly I’ll be able to post, so don’t hold that against me.

Think of me when you bite into those crisp, juicy apples—I still hold that the tarter, the better, but whichever you prefer—as they come into season.

9 comments:

  1. Yes Ashlee really talks like this at home all the time.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Oh, I forgot to tell that Ashlee has our 3 1/2 year old friend Elizabeth quoting Dante "Abandon all hope he who enters here" and telling her grandmother that the pretty lights are really the "Aurora Borealis"

    ReplyDelete
  3. You'll miss all of that when I'm gone. ;D

    ReplyDelete
  4. Mmmmm the tartest apples are the best. Especially when combined with wheat bread and pepperjack cheese. Yummm

    ReplyDelete
  5. I concur. Wholeheartedly. I was just reminiscing the other day about grilled cheese and apple sandwiches, Monday afternoon movie marathons, and the rainbow couch.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Sounds like fun, especially while I am in HOT Florida in July... I pray you have the great adventure you seek! Cindy Pratt

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hi Ashley,
    I look forward to following along. Hope this is a great experience for you. When you need to thaw out you can come to visit us

    Don Pratt

    ReplyDelete
  8. Hi Ashlee, I really enjoyed your first blog. I love to read anything you write and will eagerly await the next blog about your apple picking adventure. Hey, looking forward to your first book as well. Yes, Elizabeth is a very educated 3 1/2 year old thanks to your teaching.

    ReplyDelete