The Place We Call Home: Essays and Stories by Sterling Students

Published By Julia Vallera Featuring Work by Sterling Students in Dr. Carol Dickson’s Nature Writing Course, May 2025

A photo of downtown Nashua New Hampshire during the Holidays

A view of downtown Nashua, NH during the holiday season, from Emma Weldon’s essay. Image credit: Downtown Nashua

This semester, students in Dr. Carol Dickson’s Nature Writing course were given an open-ended assignment:

“Write about a place that is significant to you—one that represents your relationship to where you live, or the place you call home.”

The prompt marked a creative culmination of weeks spent exploring American environmental writing from diverse perspectives. Through intensive study of authors, craft, and the ways language shapes our connection to the more-than-human world, students prepared to tell their own place-based stories.

From Virginia to Colorado, the Hudson Valley to New Hampshire, students submitted nonfiction pieces and creative reflections grounded in the landscapes they come from. Each story offers a personal glimpse into the author’s memories, values, and sense of belonging. Sights, smells, and sounds are captured in vivid detail, invoking nostalgia and an intimacy only possible from lived experience. Fleeting moments are rendered with nuance—only recognizable to someone who has walked that same trail or seen that same light dozens of times.

At Sterling College, we believe learning happens across all aspects of life: Academics, Work, and Community. Every class is grounded in experiential education, field-based practice, and hands-on skill-building that encourages both personal and intellectual growth.

Sterling student Sarah Tutt beautifully reflects this connection between life and learning. Drawing from her childhood in Colorado and her path into Ecology, she writes:

“Here is where my interest in plants began, in wanting to know the names of the flowers who granted respite to the fields of brown and yellow.”

We invite you to read the full essays below and discover how our talented students draw meaning and inspiration from the unique places they call home.

  • My love of ecology grew from my dog’s love of a lake

    Dark blue mountains reaching to clear blue sky, clouds their canopy

    Trails made up of loose dirt, stones

    Dried up streams carve the landscape, only run consistently in early summer

    Yuccas, yarrow, cacti, lambs ear, thistles, penny-cress

    Tree growing over time, holding a swing too high up to reach

    Pond hiding in a valley surrounded by shrubby trees, filled with cattails

    Geese constantly in residence, no longer startled by a bark

    Pipes from old construction projects strewn about the grass

    Dogs bolting across the land after balls or each other, rough housing in the dirt until they

    are covered in it

    I am out of breath only a half hour in, my body not used to walking for so long in this

    place where driving is the only way to get anywhere

    Of course, at this time, I didn’t know that my blood pressure was so low

    Suppressed by a long time medication, meant to help but secretly hurting

    My body is building up bit by bit every week, until my breath starts to return

    The stories that this land holds, so many people coming here to simply talk and walk, so

    many friendships started by dogs butt-sniffing greetings.

    My dad and I, our relationship so often rocky in those days, pose each other impossible

    philosophical questions to each other, just to enjoy each other’s excited voices.

    There is a sign in bright red blocky letters “No Entering”, maybe because of the pipe's

    dangerous nature or the ecological importance of a water hole in a place that can be

    dry for miles.

    The order was never enforced and our dog so enjoyed swimming, and there wasn't

    anywhere else deep enough for her to be free to paddle around like a beaver.

    Here is where my interest in plants began, in wanting to know the names of the flowers

    who granted respite to the fields of brown and yellow

    In wanting to know what birds my dog enjoyed scaring off in the lake

  • I live in Leeland Station, a suburban neighborhood in Fredericksburg. The houses look similar, with rows of lawns in the front and back. Perfectly trimmed, uniform grass that doesn’t have much diversity other than dandelions, henbit, purple dead nettle, clovers, and wild violets. It’s one of the strange contrasts of living here: people plant trees and put up bird feeders, but they also mow down anything that doesn’t fit the image of a perfect lawn. Monoculture yards leave little room for native plants, and many people don’t think twice about what’s growing there as long as it stays green.

    Still, plants show up in their quiet ways and the buzzing carpenter bees collect and gather pollen in order to create food, and spread the pollen past the yards and into the wooded areas.

    One morning, just before sunrise, I saw a fox walking along the edge of a backyard, near the tree line behind my house. It moved quickly. That moment made me realize how close wildness still is, even in a place that feels so controlled.

    There’s a small pond tucked behind part of the neighborhood. It’s easy to miss if you’re not looking for it. The water is dark, but it reflects the sky and trees, and it’s full of life with frogs croaking, birds calling, dragonflies hovering just above the surface.

    Not everything around the neighborhood is native to the area around. English ivy and Japanese honeysuckle climb up trees and fences, choking out the native species. Even so, the wildness within the area still shows itself.

  • Chartreuse autumn leaves and purple sunsets feel like home to me. People travel from around the country to see the smoldering golds and reds as the leaves begin their dying process. The Shawangunks rise around the valley, and it was in these mountains that I first tasted freedom. Every trail felt like a hidden treasure, waiting to be discovered. The sounds of car horns that I had grown used to in Brooklyn were replaced by the crunch of leaves under hiking boots. The silence and darkness of the woods, once scary to me, made me feel grounded. I started to see the trees and the animals around me. I spent nights in teepees perched on rocky ridges overlooking the quiet town below. The world beneath me felt small. The Hudson Valley holds my memories like a warm blanket, softly wrapped around the parts of me I left behind, the parts of me that hurt. It pulls me back like a vine, gently tugging at my heart.

  • A section of the street is packed with people wearing green, red, white, or other earthy toned winter jackets and warm wool hats from sidewalk to sidewalk. Every year, crowds leave just enough space for others to move. The smell of food cooking drifts from restaurants and food trucks with tables on the sidewalk. Fair trucks selling cotton candy, caramel corn, and fried dough are scattered down the street, trying to get one last sale in before the snow comes in. Sculptors with chainsaws carve ice on a roped off section of the sidewalk with a new theme each year like children’s movies or space. The light crystal-clear sculptures are surrounded by people taking pictures since they will likely be gone by morning from a heat wave. A space reserved for dancing plays a variety of music at each end of the closed off street blends when standing between them. 

    The Holiday Stroll in Nashua happens every year the Saturday night after Thanksgiving. It is one constant in a changing area. Main Street is lined with restaurants and diners, barber shops, thrift stores, city hall, a bank, a library, a new city community theater, and a bagel shop with odd hours. There used to be a room in the library at the end of the street that showed Christmas trees that were decorated by schools in the area and was popular at the Stroll, but for some unknown reason it stopped one year. I have seen a shoe store with a mural on the inside that I used to go to all the time as a kid be torn down and turned into a community theater. Restaurants closed and the now open spaces were used for neighboring restaurants to expand or a new barber shop to move in before they were torn down. My favorite hot dog place closed and turned into a barbeque restaurant. Even with all this change, the Holiday Stroll continues to happen every year and it has become a tradition for my parents and me.

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Digging Deep Into Solid Waste: An Article by Sterling Student Michael Apicella