Tuesday, September 2, 2014

“The Adventure of Martha’s Vineyard”: The completion of the TY 12-week Training Program

“Give us a scene in The Adventure of Martha’s Vineyard…” I asked.

Eva and Tessa teaming up with Ian to tackle this large Rhododendron in West Field South. It got a little close for a little while, as Tessa disappeared to cut back a grape vine that was sneaking up from the middle.

It has been three weeks since Eva Colberg and Tessa Youngfinished their 12-week internship at the Polly Hill Arboretum. It was a tearful, but happy goodbye, as each were off to the next-best-thing in their lives. One is going back to Rhode Island to start her sophomore year and Horticulture Club presidency, and the other is off to Madagascar to study conservation of natural resources, before returning to the College of William and Mary. Such is the life of a successful college student.

It has taken me three-weeks to get this done only because of family visiting and personal travel. This last week at PHA was my first week without Eva and Tessa’s bright, smiling faces around at PHA and the Hoft Farm; and the absence revealed how powerful, positive their impact was.

We worked and lived with each other for twelves weeks, and traveled across six states on two different horticulture adventures together. We have had a truly remarkable, epic summer, and it is my honor to share it here with you.

~

As you may remember, these ladies have just started their professional journeys in horticulture. They are off to terrific starts, if their final thoughts on their experience are any indication. Reflecting back on their time at PHA, they had some great memories to share, some silly and some spontaneously inspiring.

“One of my favorite internship memories,” Eva smiled, “was that time when Tom was like, ‘Let’s go wander.’ It was magical. That will forever stick in my mind. I hope that I can make someone as happy as that.”

“Something I’m going to remember forever, for sure, and that I’m going to tell all of my children someday, or nieces and nephews, or younger people that I have an influence on later in life,” Tessa rambled on, laughing, “is definitely the Bobcat lawnmower story of me going up the tree yielding/wielding the lawnmower. That, for sure, will forever be set.”

The PHA internship was about work and expanding perspectives, but it was about fun too. Chainsawing and Taylor Dunn-driving were definitely crowd-pleasers. Eva got excited about pruning, while Tessa liked tree-climbing. “The whole ride, man. It was great,” Tessa said.

There were so many favorite parts of working at PHA, the question was daunting for Eva. After an off-the-wall reference to “if this had been in Nevada….” we got down to it. She was happy to have experienced and been exposed to horticulture.

“It’s such a magical place. Everyone always stands together and they can take us to all these cool places…” she said. “I was so happy at the fact that I learned so much. It’s definitely something that I want to do again.”

Tessa found the rewarding nature of the job and working with a team were her favorite parts. 
Tessa expressing her excitement over a blooming Rhododendron. She did this a lot.

“I love being able to do jobs and as you’re doing them see the transformation of the area,” she explained. “Then, when you’re done with it and you step back, it is this totally new area, and it’s just so beautiful. You feel great because you did that, with help from your teammates. With their help, you created this beautiful thing and then almost automatically people who are visiting the Arboretum…go ‘thank you for doing this…’ They come up to you and give you a big smile. I think that is the most rewarding thing I’ve ever encountered or been a part of.”

After completing their internship, Eva and Tessa have different thoughts about their future careers, though they also know they have more time to grow and discover what they want to do.

“I really do love the public garden setting,” Tessa shared. “It’s hard to say where I want to be in a few years because there is so much for me to be exposed to in the upcoming years, but public gardens definitely hold a special place in my heart.”

“One thing for sure, is that [the Polly Hill Internship] made me more certain in that I wanted to stay in horticulture and not change to something like sustainable ag,” Tessa shared. “It helped define the path of what I wanted to do and continue doing in my college career.”

Eva concurred, though she was jealous of the classes Tessa gets to take in her major studies, since William and Mary doesn’t have a horticulture program. “But at the same time it does give me hope that I can still do what I want to do,” she said.

Tessa hanging out in a tree, as Ian fetched a ladder.
“I am thinking more about what my major is and there are many more jobs than I realized,” Eva admitted. “Honestly, my dream job would be to go on plant expeditions all the time and go plant collecting, which is cool, but you can do that and get to other cool stuff at the same time if you work in horticulture.”

Not only were they more confident in how they felt about their studies, they had a better appreciation of horticulture as a field because of their internship.

“It has actually made my perspective on horticulture broader, because one of the great things about the internship was that it really let you have the opportunity to test the waters in the whole sector of public horticulture,” Tessa said. “We weren’t just sitting outside weeding every day, all day; though we did that a lot, which is great, but it’s not that it’s all we did.”

It was insightful for Eva as well, who wasn’t aware of the realm of horticulture or how small it really is, but she was really excited about the options.

“…it is more open than I imagined, like you can start out doing one thing and then go on to another thing,” she said. “and then your job can allow you to explore other parts of the field or you can just kind of shift.”

~

Working was the main purpose of the experience, but living on Martha’s Vineyard was also a big part. Eva loved the close-knit community on the island.

“Besides the adventure that is really just right outside your door, the second you go outside there is something new, just the whole vibe that the island has, that people on the island have,” Tessa reflected. “Mostly everyone is pretty relaxed and chill.”

It was challenging for them not to have a car and to have rely on the buses, however it also allowed for some fun adventures. “Being able to get to cool nature places by foot or bike was really nice,” Eva reflected, despite the precarious long and winding road that is Lamberts Cove. She was regularly running to Lambert’s Cove Beach or Ice House, or riding her bike to the West Tisbury Farmer’s Market. The Lamberts Cove bus is known as Tessa’s bus, in honor of her bus adventures.

“Short story version: met a man on the bus, found out that man played the violin, sang Jesus Christ Superstar on the bus, and then ran into him again later in town, and ended up just getting in one of his friend’s cars and going to hear their music rehearsal, and he gave me this really great book: Johnathan Livingson Seagull, which has changed my life and will continue to do so as I continue to reread it. That is the biggest adventure that I think I’ve had on this island.”
Eva and Tessa loved the mushrooms at The Folly, a private garden we visited
during the Garden Conservancy's Open Garden Days.



Tessa’s leaving signaled the end of the summer and slowly the Hoft Farm has emptied. Listening to the interview recording and writing this blog post has made me laugh and made me cry, but all in good ways. Other Hoft Farm homies made silly cameos, namely Tessa’s surfer-bro alter-ego and Dylan, with his opening detailed recount of his day, reminding me of a summer well-spent. Although the summer season is over, our friendships will remain. 

From changes in perspectives to new-found loves, they have embarked on an adventure of a life-time. I wish them both all the best in their travels and their studies, and look forward to hearing about all the cool things they will most certainly do!

Final note from Eva: Be a good intern.

Final note from Tessa: Live every day like you might die tonight. Oh, and: the meal’s not over until you hate yourself.

The making of the dessert that inspired Tessa's final thought.

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