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International Picnics

Hold the lemon!

by Edie Clark

I've been on the road for about a week, with more miles ahead of me. I sometimes tell people I don't write for a living, I drive. I once calculated that I had driven a million miles in the course of my work for Yankee and that was some time ago. If I have to drive, which, quite, frankly, I love, I can't think of anywhere I'd rather be than on the back roads of New England. Right now, I'm working on a long story about the Canadian border between New England and Canada. I've been out for a week and, through no particular planning of my own, it has been one glorious day after another, driving through the green majesty of Vermont and up into Canada, chasing sunrises, sunsets, thunderheads, words and stories.

In Canada, the signs are all in French so my high school lessons have to be recalled, though not always successfully. I did remember that the highway speed signs posted as 70, were really more like 30 mph, and I recalled the meaning of Arret but what were these frequent signs, Chemin du Chansons? I still am not sure what those mean. Somewhere north of the border of Highgate Springs, possibly in Bedford, Quebec, I passed a farm that raised elk and sold the meat from the kitchen of the farmhouse. In bare feet, the woman of the house came to the back door and asked if I would like to come in. She had a freezer full of elk steaks. I did not buy any, mostly because I didn't know when I might be home to cook it. But, even in mid-July, it was still strawberry season up there and many roadside stands were selling baskets of bright red fruit, irresistible for the journey, even if, in my exuberance over their goodness, I managed to stain my best traveling shirt, first day out.

In the delightful little village of Frelighsburg, we stopped for a picnic under towering pine trees. The old grammar school served as an information center and provided a clean bathroom, always welcome on the road. A young girl, probably still in school but out for the summer, stood ready for us behind the counter and proudly told us, in uncertain English, the story of Frelighsburg, a town that once thrived on its apple orchards but that now is known for its wines. All such products were for sale in the old schoolroom. A couple of women, who had ridden in on their bikes, sat at a picnic table on the green, chattering away to each other in French. Could it be that I was only a few miles from Vermont?

Outside, under the pines, we spread the red-checked tablecloth we had packed for these occasions, set the table with plates and silverware, cut up carrots, cucumbers, peppers and cheese for our salad, which included greens picked from the garden just before leaving, and eagerly dug in. I am not one to take road food seriously. I travel frequently and find it is harder and harder to find a place that serves good, nutritious food at reasonable prices. I remember when fast food was first spreading across this land and one of the aspects of it that supposedly helped in its rise was the idea that when you ate at, say, McDonald's or Wendy's, you would know exactly what to expect, whether you were in Vermont or in Texas. That is perfectly true and I can't defend some of the really and truly terrible food you can stumble upon when out on the road, in a place that is totally unknown to you. And the worst part is that when you get up from that meal, you have to pay for it. But I regret that that one reason has convinced people to eat generically rather than embrace the specific place where they end up at mealtime.

Reader CommentsRSS

Comment from Annie Copps on July 17, 2008

Brava Edie. Cutlery, napery, food from home--so civilized. Nothing like a fast food burger to unravel the mood and vistas of being away.

Comment from Doris Matthews on July 19, 2008

Hi Edie, OK so now, when can I come along? You seem to make every adventure a pleasure. Maybe the next time you know your're approaching a border guard, you can take the lemon and put it in your pocket (or some other place out of sight if you know what I mean). Safe travels. Doris PS I think that chemin du chansons means the road songs or songs of the road-something like that (my high school French escapes me alot).

Comment from annie Gloss on July 20, 2008

Sounds like beautiful, fun travel adventures you are having. Wish we were along! We pack picnics, too, on occasion, even for day trips in the Pacific NW. The food is so much healthier!

Yes, the translation is "road song" or "country road song."

This posting reminded me of the story about Helen Nearing and her roadside veggie sandwiches!

Comment from Barbara Fitzgerald on July 24, 2008

Good Morning Edie, Sounds wonderful. It reminds me of the picnics my mother and I enjoyed while visiting her family in Alsace, France...out of the car trunk came folding table, chairs, table linens, china and silverware...not to mention delicious fresh food and wine! This would all be set up in an apple orchard or in the road side shade.You and they know how to live. Enjoy! Barbara F.

Comment from Barbara Fitzgerald on July 24, 2008

Good Morning Edie, I wrote a comment but it seems to have gotten lost in the www, so I'll try again. Your story reminds me of the marvelous picnics my mother and I shared with her family in Alsace, France. Off on the road, the car would stop in an apple orchard or the shade of a road side tree and out of the trunk would come folding table, chairs, table linens, china, silverware and fabulous fresh food and wine. You and they know how to enjoy life...how wonderful! Barbara F.

Comment from Susan Cole on July 26, 2008

Reminds me of my journeys to both ends of US1...Key West, FL and Fort Kent, ME. Of the two, I found Ft. Kent the far more interesting and attractive...a place I would like to return to again and again. Key West, on the other hand, is 'just OK" by comparison.

From the end of US1 we drove acrosss the river into Canada, following the Canadian highway east and re-entering the US at Houlton, ME., the northern terminus of I-95.

Thus, I managed to experience the two ends of two great highways..all in one trip..!!

Susan

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