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BRATTLEBORO

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Your support powers every story we tell. Please help us reach our year-end goal.

Donate Now

Your support powers every story we tell. We're committed to producing high-quality, fact-based news and information that gives you the facts in this community we call home. If our work has helped you stay informed, take action, or feel more connected to Windham County – please give now to help us reach our goal of raising $150,000 by December 31st.

Voices

Memories of Scott Nearing

Sometime around 1950, and obviously before Scott and Helen Nearing deserted the Stratton Mountain environs before a repulsive - for them - ski area development, my mother, a former journalist, traipsed over from Landgrove to meet him.

Whether the encounter was announced or not I have no memory; I suspect the latter. I (then 11 years or so of age) was in tow. I recall two episodes.

Mr. Nearing encountered me leaning over a small pool he had made, within which was one “resident” and very large trout. I was dropping pebbles upon the trout.

He admonished me: “Would you like someone dropping boulders on you?”

Chagrined, I deserted the activity. I now wonder how he felt about the containment or captivity of the trout. Maybe it was being saved, by Nearing, from people with lures and sharp hooks - and from being devoured.

Another memory: Somehow, the night before, it seems a porcupine had entered the house - memorable because the main room had, as one long wall, the face of a boulder or bedrock or ledge.

Mr. Nearing recounted how he had spent much of the night coaxing verbally the porcupine to leave the house. No sticks, no physical brandishing - just “reason.”

I now wonder how the porcupine got in. Would this harbinger of the “back to the land” movement in Jamaica, Vermont, have had an “open-door policy”?

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