Posted by: Sally Ingraham | December 29, 2007

Playing in Kennebunk

I had a lovely time in Kennebunk over Christmas. It is always fun to go somewhere you haven’t been in a while – even if it is a place where you spent much of your life. Driving around in Kennebunkport, or out along Parson’s Way brings back many memories and at the same time feels like a new experience.

As I am getting more and more in to photography, I made sure that I got to the beaches to take some pictures, and at sunset specifically. I have been reading books about light and composition, so I kind of knew what I was looking for.

A walk on Parson’s Beach with my Dad was especially nice, as the sun was just going down, and there were a lot of ways to play with exposure – which I am just figuring out how to do on my digital camera. I got some shots I was quite pleased with.

It took me a long time to see the beauty in Maine, coming from the vastly different landscape of New Mexico, but now that my eyes are opened I just can’t get over it. Every day there is something new and fantastic happening in the sky, or along the coast, mixed up with the ocean, or playing in the mountains.

It’s a pretty special place.

Posted by: Sally Ingraham | December 21, 2007

Stormy Waters


Geyser-like
Originally uploaded by tuulenhaiven

I sat in my car trying to thaw my fingers with the stuffy automobile heat, while the engine of my Subaru Outback groaned. A jogger running by just moments before, while I was still outside, had kindly paused to turn my lights off before realizing that the car was running. There was no way, this morning, that I was going to turn the car off, or venture much farther away than 100 yards. The jogger was made of stiffer stuff than I!

Visiting Otter Cliffs in the ferocious cold of this bizarre December is becoming a habit with me. Today with the wind chill factor I am sure temperatures were flirting with the single digits. My fingers, even after I succumbed to wrapping them in red wool, can bear testimony to that. Having dressed for driving, with quick dashes into the elements, at times I was shivering so badly I couldn’t even begin to hold my camera still. Foolish me.

What a show I witnessed, however. Mount Desert wrapped itself once again in thick white clouds and snow yesterday. While the snowfall was mediocre, the waves the storm kicked up were a fine reward for my suffering.

It is amazing to me that such beauty can come from such wrath. The ocean flings itself in fury against the immovable wall of Otter Cliffs, only to be sent flying again in a glorious plume of foam. I saw storm surge go roaring 20 feet into the air today, and higher yesterday.

I went out both days to take pictures, but that purpose only disguised my true intent. It seems that whenever I am upset, or when my own life seems particularly stormy, I turn to nature. I can get more comfort, more focus, more heart healing solace from an hour or two of walking around outside than I have ever found anywhere else. I appreciate human sympathy and advice, and find it helpful, but for real soul searching and mind clearing I seek out the quiet of the mountains. Or in this case, the solid foundation of Otter Cliffs, tormented by wind and waves but still a firm place to plant my feet.

Call it communing with nature, call it speaking with, or listening for the whisper of God, call it what you will. Whatever it is, it’s worth braving frostbite to feel it’s touch. I feel remarkably better, and the pictures I took weren’t half bad either.

Posted by: Sally Ingraham | December 18, 2007

Pole Troubles

This is a piece I wrote for my writing course. It showcases another facet of that trip we took on the Boreals – still the only time we have ventured out on them so far this year!

Click click click….click…click click.

My boyfriend stood in front of me, stalled in the snow, his Boreals half buried and one of his ski poles in his hands. The other pole was stabbed into a foot and half drift, his gloves balanced precariously on top.

Click click…clickclickclickclick.

I took deep breaths, turning my eyes from his fleece covered back to the wide sweep of the carriage road ahead. It bent round a corner and disappeared into snow-frosted trees and a tumble of mountain boulders. I focused on the squirrel tracks that paralleled our own plodding ski trail, and fought off growing irritation.

Click click click…click.

My boyfriend turned and turned the sections of his telescoping pole, attempting to lock it back in place after almost fifteen minutes of twisting it in what I was convinced had to be the wrong direction. A breeze sprang up behind me and slipped into the space between my neck and my coat. I shivered, and clenched my teeth.

We had set out from our car so confidently only an hour ago, eager to try our new skis. There was rarely over a foot of snow to play in this early in December, so we were feeling particularly pleased with ourselves.

Breaking a trail with our short, fat Boreals soon proved to be much more than we had bargained for. An hour of sweat and struggle, and heavy shuffling steps that bore no similarity to the smooth glide we had imagined, hadn’t even brought us far enough to catch a glimpse of Jordan Pond.

Click click. “I think it’s broken,” my boyfriend said. Click click.

Acadia National Park, there on the carriage road that ribbons round the side of Penobscot Mountain, was quiet that day. The hum of automobiles was muffled. The animals had left tracks but were themselves invisible. The wind rustled a branch now and then. In the space between, the stillness was so complete that it seemed to grow into a presence like that of another person. I found myself wishing that it was my only companion.

CLICK!

“Oh. There it goes.”

Satisfaction comes in many forms I suppose. For him, it came from being clever enough to “fix” his ski pole. For me it came some time later, after we had finally shuffled on, gotten our view of the frozen sweep of Jordan Pond, and then retraced our steps. Making it back to the car, having had the gumption to get out of it to begin with – within that deep sense of accomplishment and satisfaction, I forgot about the ache in my legs and how badly I had wanted to poke my boyfriend in the back with my own poles.”

Posted by: Sally Ingraham | December 13, 2007

Ocean Path Stroll

 

Fourteen degrees is cold. With a bit of a wind, it feels even colder. Sometimes, though, such temperatures can be tolerated – even enjoyed. This is especially true when you venture out with a fresh sense of wonder, a renewed delight in the natural world. As I slipped and slid down the Ocean Path that runs along the top of Otter Cliffs this morning, I felt as though I had new eyes to see with, and a heightened awareness of the beauty that surrounded me.

Snow rosyed the cheeks of the granite that makes up this coastline, while the ice had left trails of lace. My boot prints followed the tracks of deer and birds, pressed deep into the crisp snow. The rock cave my sisters and I used to play in wore a fluffy white hat, and the waves tapped gently at the base of it’s stone foundations.

It is hard to imagine that all of this might disappear, that the ocean might someday rise and the pink granite of Otter Cliffs might go ‘glug, glug’ and slip away beneath the surface of the water. With the images and graphs and charts of An Inconvenient Truth fresh in my mind, I felt a little sad and a little afraid, standing there looking down toward Sand Beach.

The biting breeze brought me quickly back to the present, however, and I raised my camera to document the moment, and the scene that was before me. A crow flew over my head, cawing loud enough to startle me, make me laugh a little, and then quickly catch my balance as my feet slid on icy rock.

I have nothing brilliant to say about global warming, or humanity’s somewhat terrifying effect on the world around us. I do what I can in the hope that my children will have the chance to see the things that I have seen. I take pictures.

And I find, as I did this morning, that I am always thankful for that sense of wonder, the genuine excitement, that drives me outdoors – even on brutally frigid winter mornings!

Posted by: Sally Ingraham | December 8, 2007

Boreal Behavior


December Bubbles
Originally uploaded by tuulenhaiven

I am a little embarrassed that I have not been playing outside in the snow every single day since the big storm. I have a fairly good excuse, however. My first foray into the 16 inches of winter that presented themselves at the beginning of the week, nearly killed me.

My boyfriend and I each posses a piece of recreational equipment that is a cross between snow shoes and cross-country skis. Called Boreals, they do look like short, fat skis. Instead of tromping around as you would in snowshoes, you can kind of slide, but the lovely glide of real skis is unobtainable.

In a fit of enthusiasm, we packed these things into our car and drove over to the Jordan Pond area, eager to try them out on the carriage roads. After fifteen minutes of experimenting with how to strap them onto our boots, we shuffled off.

Shuffling is about the most pleasant motion we achieved that day. Cutting a trail through almost a foot and a half of snow is never particularly fun. The Boreals only made that truer.

My boyfriend and I consider ourselves to be fairly physically active. I myself am a believer in ‘sticking it out’ and not complaining. However, this day each sticky stride that took me further from the car only made me more aware of how far it was back. I tried to talk myself into enjoying the aching pain in parts of my legs that I hadn’t known were there. I told myself stories about how this mode of transportation was far superior to actually slogging through the snow in boots. I am good at fooling myself in such ways, but those Boreals almost broke me.

Uphill and down through the woods on the lovely carriage road above Jordan Pond. Perfect silence for miles and not another human being to be seen. Funny animal tracks in the drifts. Snow frosted evergreens, boulders, mountains. Peace and tranquility, and me, struggling along, sweating, chest heaving, legs like tree stumps sprouting painful new growths.

Once we admitted that we were being beaten, and turned round to head back, and finally made it down to the edge of Jordan Pond, then we felt a certain exhilaration. A sense of having striven against a mighty foe, and survived. Satisfaction that made us forget about the frustration.

We felt rather pleased with ourselves. The world looked pretty again, and the snow had lost it’s sticky-fingered malice. The Bubbles blinked at us from beneath their frosted eyelashes, and we winked back.

Later, stiff and sore and soaking in the hot tub, we were content to admit that we would take the next day off. No use rushing off again. The snow wasn’t going anywhere.

Three days later, feeling less like a very old woman and more like myself, I am almost ready to venture out again. There’s still no use rushing though. It looks like the snow is here to stay.

The Boreals are leaning against the wall by the door, taunting me gently.

“Come on – don’t you have the courage to try me again?”

I think I do. I also think tomorrow will be soon enough!

Posted by: Sally Ingraham | December 4, 2007

Let it snow, snow, snow

I am back on Mount Desert Island, but after a couple days of snow it looks more like the magical land of Santa’s North Pole. I am house-sitting for the first time, and I am thankful for the owner’s truck with 4-wheel drive. My Subaru looks like a large sugar coated lozenge, and at the same time like a small white mouse. The snow surrounding it reaches the top of it’s wheels.

In spite of being snowed in, I feel rather like I am on vacation at a luxurious hotel. There is a wonderful new bed to snuggle down into. There is a 3ft. wide HD TV. There are cupboards full of weird foods, such as wasabi in a tube. There is a wood stove. There is a hot tub!

There are also Jake, Lucy, and Rudder, the owner’s chocolate labs. Basically good dogs. Kind of cute. A little insistent about going outside in the middle of the night. A little messy when they eat. A little stinky when they’re wet. The usual.

Dealing with them is a small price to pay, I suppose, when I find myself sitting in the hot tub at 11 o’clock at night, snowflakes on my shoulders, but with deliciously warm toes!

Posted by: Sally Ingraham | November 30, 2007

Laudholm Farm Morning


Breeze-caught Milkweed
Originally uploaded by tuulenhaiven

There is nothing quite like the imminent threat of suddenly discovering an arrow protruding from your side to make you wish that you had had the sense to stay in bed a few hours more. That and a biting wind that seems to be already nipping away pieces of your body.

I found myself enjoying both of these sensations as I tromped round Laudholm Farms, in Wells, ME this morning. I had tumbled out of bed in a mild hurry to catch the day while the sun was still shining. An hour after I rose, I found myself bundled into a sort of fleece armor, clutching my camera like it was the only means I had of defending myself.

I had strolled all the way across the wildlife reserve to the beach – a mile and a half I believe – before I saw the flaming orange sign. It gently pointed out the fact that a controlled deer hunt would be in progress from November 12th to December 29th, and that BOW HUNTERS would be present on all days except Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Sundays.

“Brilliant,” was all I could muster up the cool to say. And then, “Now you tell me.”

I bravely determined to continue on. It is my belief, and I am pretty sure I read this somewhere too, that bow hunters have to get quite close to a deer before they can shoot it properly. I truly hoped they would be able to tell the difference between an attractive female and a mangy deer.

Cheerfully tricking myself into this sense of security, I ambled on, snapping pictures and soaking in as much November sunshine as I could.

In the end it was that pesky wind that drove me back to my car, and all I saw of the bow hunters were footprints in the frozen mud.

Posted by: Sally Ingraham | November 29, 2007

Threatening Storm


Threatening Storm
Originally uploaded by tuulenhaiven

Here’s a picture I took the other day when Mom and I went for a walk around Rachael Carson’s. She talked me into going round the circle the opposite way from what I am used to, and the whole place looked new and different. Cool! 🙂

Posted by: Sally Ingraham | November 29, 2007

Calamari Strikes Again

I have been visiting my parent’s home in Kennebunk, ME, for going on a week and a half now. Thanksgiving and it’s promise of a feast drew me down from my island, and my bed on the floor in the apartment where I am still only half moved in.

Fittingly perhaps, in many ways this visit has revolved around food. There are few things that I am more thankful for than good food.

Prepared by grandparents and aunts and uncles, the meal I enjoyed on Thanksgiving was filled with old favorites as well as new surprises. The green bean casserole that I prepared under my mother’s direction, was comfortingly slimy and scattered profusely with soggy onion rings. The stuffed portabella mushrooms crafted by my uncle, would not have been complete without their brilliant orange and garlic infused companion dressing. The homemade cranberry sauce that barely made it to the table, had a laid back sweetness that was quickly dispelled by the crunch of whole cranberries. I could write poetry about the mini cheesecakes, or my grandmother’s apple pie, but I will spare you.

Instead I will move on to the pumpkin whoopie pies that I made with my little sister a few days after the Thanksgiving haze had moved onto the horizon. We cooked the little cakes until they were ‘firm but springy’, and then waited impatiently to slather a mixture of cream cheese and confectionary sugar between their plump cheeks. It is a small miracle in my mind that we then held out until after supper, to see how much of that same delicious concoction we could smear across our own cheeks.

Another, seldom seen, sister prompted a lunch date at Alison’s, in Kennebunk Port. The coconut fried shrimp I ordered gave me a moment’s pause, as they were coated right out to their shiny tails and I did not at first know which end was ‘up’. I had less trouble eating an almond crusted, and filled, pastry at Panera Bread in Biddeford some days later. The crab and havarti sandwich I enjoyed this very afternoon at Federal Jack’s, again in Kennebunk Port, was a perfect blend of melted cheese and flaking, but not too fishy crab.

Food, food, glorious food, for thee I do give thanks.

One food that I have never enjoyed, was grudgingly given a second chance during this visit. After a nearly disastrous run-in with whole fried, perhaps baby, squids, abundantly scattered across my first ever pan of paella, I have avoided calamari with diligence. As with broccoli, leeks, and steak however, I may have to change my mind on this food point.

Last night some friends of mine took me to a favored Thai place in Portland. Bangkok Thai Restaurant, on Congress Street, has a pleasant golden atmosphere and it’s choices of spiciness run from mild to very hot, with ten stars, and the number 911 helpfully included. Clever spats between my dinner mates as well as a very nice plate of Pud Thai made the evening enjoyable to all my senses.

It was here that the calamari struck, in the form of an appetizer, lightly battered and deep fried, accompanied by a sweet and sour chili sauce. I very nearly didn’t eat any, visions of tiny squids – heads, brains, and suction cups still attached – leering at me from a distant Santa Fe paella pan. My friends goaded, and then resorted to daring me, and when it became a matter of guts I decided that I could probably swallow some squidy stomach.

Fortunately for me, these were only tentacles. Fat tentacles, with the batter barely clinging. But what lovely, buttery batter, and what surprisingly tender, mysteriously tasty tentacle. I believe I hid my shock quite well, and only cooly declared them to be ‘better than I expected’.

I can now admit that I was sorry to see that they were equally enjoyed by the rest of the party and disappeared with a speed that left me in the dust, sucking on a still tantalizingly flavored finger. I will also admit, that when I make my way home again in a day or two, I may have to return to the Bangkok Thai Restaurant and order a cold Singha and my own personal plate of the once dreaded calamari.

I guess what I have learned from this experience is that I am thankful for second chances – and second helpings. I’ll take my tentacles, and eat them too.

Posted by: Sally Ingraham | November 28, 2007

More changes

I also just set up a site at Flickr, so check out my attempts at photography if you’re bored. 🙂 The sets are kind of fun to make. I’ll have to upload some of my road-trip pictures.

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