Spring, 2007

Ideas Along the Road

From time to time, a friend of the magazine will ask me,  "Where do you get your story ideas?"

"I don't know," I'll usually say.  "I just look around."

Not much of an answer, I suppose.  But it is true.

Consider this: The other day, my daughter called and asked if I'd like to come out to her house in West Pawlet.  She'd fix some lunch and I'd get to spend some time with my granddaughter who was six months old.  No chance I'd turn down that invitation.

So I drove in to the grocery store to pick up some things to help out with the lunch.  This included one of the wonderful artisan Vermont cheeses.  We've done stories on the local cheese makers here at Stratton Magazine and I probably got the idea in the grocery store or the local farmers' markets.  You hear about how people get their best ideas in the shower.  For me, it's often while I'm buying food. » read more

A Vermont Wedding ~ Jaimi Christensen & Jim Ryan ~ September 23, 2006

By Laurie Sullivan
Photography by James Schriebl

Their mutual love of Vermont, skiing and each other drew Jaimi Christensen and Jim Ryan to the quaint white colonial church with its tall spire in Manchester. » read more

Going Back

Photography and Essay by Hubert Schriebl

I had been away from the high mountains too long. So finally last summer things came together, and I was on my way to Switzerland. Like seeing friends you have not seen for a long time, I was anxious to see once again these mountains that I had climbed fifty years ago. How had they changed? What would it feel like to put on heavy climbing boots and make the long walk to the mountain hut, sharing the space with friends and other people with the same dreams? On August 24th last summer, it became a reality when my Vermont neighbor, Bill Thomson, and my longtime Austrian climbing partner and Himalaya companion, Klaus Gurtler, and his daughter Katrina, were all sitting together outside the Monte Rosa Hut, watching the darkness move in on the mountains around us. The next morning we rose at 2 a.m. and began hiking. Soon after we started, we came to a long stretch of boulders and ledges that took hours to navigate with only the help of the small beams of light from our headlamps. As we reached the glacier, still well before dawn, we roped up and put on crampons for another long stretch to reach the ridge that leads to the summit of Monte Rosa. Along the way, we were rewarded with a magnificent sunrise. After a long day of climbing, we descended and reached the train station on the Gornergrat around 7 p.m., where we could look back at fantastic views of the mountains and glaciers, now scarred by climate change, but still beautiful. So, what they say is not true. You can go back!

» read more

Vermont Oil Man

Vermont Oil Man: Donny DorrVermont Oil Man: Donny DorrBy Susanne Washburn
Photography by Hubert Schriebl

There's not a dot.com to be found anywhere in the Manchester mini-empire of Donny Dorr, whose businesses range from oil sales to hay sales, from septic systems to mobile home sites and other real estate. He's a Vermont native whose father and grandfather were, as he says, "horse traders-the equivalent of today's car dealer." Along Manchester's North Road, his grandfather kept as many as 400 horses. » read more

Going Native

Going Native: Brookies are very powerful little adversaries despite their size.  Photo by Jim LapageGoing Native: Brookies are very powerful little adversaries despite their size.  Photo by Jim Lapageby Paul Fersen 

The last houses on the road are behind me. The sign that warns me the road is not open in winter slips past. » read more

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