May images from past calendars.

This past February, Heidi – the daughter of a beloved I lost to cancer in September 2025 — texted me to thank me again for a calendar I typically sent to her mother every Christmas. Every year, the front of each month featured a photo of an image I had captured in farmland that year; the back, inspirational quotes. In 2026, I compiled the calendar quotes, “in honor of courageous and inspiring women who have changed the course of our lives, if not our history.” One of those quotes was from Heidi’s mother.

“I just want to reiterate how much I love everything about this calendar,” texted Heidi. “The inspiration, the execution, the effort and intention. I really appreciate all of it. And the fact that it includes mom is even more meaningful.”

Heidi continued, “The part that really gets me is the rootedness in your ‘one place.’ We must go local. I think it is the way through this insanity on the federal level and truly the only place we have much agency. I keep thinking I was made to do bigger things and have a larger stage. Truthfully, my longing for that is likely because of how hard it can be to show up in my physical place. As Eudora Welty says, “place matters.” Sure does. Our places need us – so here’s to showing up. xoxo”

I was very taken not only by Heidi’s gratitude, but also her wisdom. “Our places need us.” In a note I included with every calendar this year, I quoted Ursula LeGuin who urged artists “to seek the irreproducible moment, the brief, fragile story told in one place.” 

BARC field, 6:47 a.m. Monday, 5/18/26 (Please note that the photographs are not in the order they were taken. I tend to roam all OVER my one place.)

That one place for me is the Beltsville Agricultural Research Center (BARC), comprised of 6,500 acres of farmland less than a mile from my home. Sadly, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), blighted by the Trump administration, plans to “decommission” BARC, a 116-year-old facility, citing over $500 million in needed repairs and high maintenance costs. The first phase of BARC’s closing is scheduled for September 30 of this year. The plan involves relocating thousands of jobs and research projects to other sites nationwide “to better serve constituents.”

This is, of course, bullshit, but I obviously have an investment in BARC because its beauty emanates far and wide outside and inside my heart. It truly is my one place.

The Beltsville Agricultural Research Center (BARC) about a mile from my home. I photograph primarily from Research Road and off of Beaverdam Road (parallel to Beaverdam Creek). The community in which I live is considered a National Historic Landmark.

In the coming weeks, I will be telling the story of how this became my one place and how, looking back over the decades, so much led me to this place and my discovery of how deeply I care about beauty . . . and always have.

BARC, 5:59 a.m., 5/18/26
BARC, 5:33 a.m., 5/18/20

The featured photograph at the top of this post was also taken yesterday at sunrise, 6:21 a.m.

10 responses to “Places Matter”

  1. Sharon J. Anderson Avatar

    I am curious about the “one place” that other folks have. Do you have that one place? Why is it a place that matters to you?

  2. Sharon J. Anderson Avatar

    Many residents of my community fear that BARC will become the location for a huge data center or residential housing. Given the aesthetic of the current occupant of the White House, we may even see a ballroom or triumphal arch — or both.🤬

  3. Trish Miceli Avatar
    Trish Miceli

    This post and “your place” calms my soul as your way of seeing the world and all art forms has for decades. The thought of it being neglected, developed, or misused does enrage me, but your interaction with it will always matter and have lasting impact. Thank you.

    1. Sharon J. Anderson Avatar

      Thank you for your inspiring comment, Trish.

      When the USDA announced last summer that BARC would be “decommissioned” (an ugly word), I began to post some of my sunrise photos on the “Greenbelters” [my community] Facebook page as a way to buoy spirits. So many Greenbelters are heartbroken by the closing of BARC. Limited access to the landscape is one thing, but thousands of folks in my county will either lose their jobs or have to relocate. Our Congresspeople have been working mightily to stop all this — putting up lawsuits, etc. — but our county just doesn’t have the revenue to go head to head with the U.S. government. All so discouraging.

      But I keep going out; in fact, went out in my workout clothes this morning. I had a hunch the sunrise would be beautiful. Again. It was.🙏❤️

  4. Charlotte Rogers Avatar
    Charlotte Rogers

    Bless you for your diving deep into your one place. I am so sorry that your place will disappear. Ouch.
    I have places in the heart. Places from childhood and my life that remain with me and touch me.

    1. Sharon J. Anderson Avatar

      “I have places in my heart.” Love that, Charlotte.

      Another place that will always be with me is Hoffmaster State Park next to Lake Michigan — about 40 miles west of Grand Rapids. I used to spend every weekend there.

  5. Carol Westphal Avatar
    Carol Westphal

    So grateful you have found BARC, or maybe that BARC has found you! The beauty you have shared from this place is Edenic, I think. Hushedness and life brimming-ness spill out of all your pictures, and we all owe you a debt of gratitude.
    I don’t think I’ve ever had such a place, although my son Kirk’s cabin and its surroundings come pretty close. In moments of unsettled solitude, I find myself going to occasions when I have felt most at home, most truly aware of the wonders of Life. And, (hope you don’t find this too strange), I find myself reliving funerals that I have conducted. There was always a deep and very honest connectedness to those who were grieving, as well as a profound awareness of the wonder of this life and of that life that somehow, somewhere, lies beyond.

    1. Sharon J. Anderson Avatar

      I thought you might mention your son’s cabin — that he built HIMSELF!

      Your photographs — and actually your haiku and poetry as well — are often places of solace for me, and I am grateful. It is unusual (not strange) that one of your places is “reliving funerals” that you have conducted but given your sensitivity to the pain and grief of others, it makes sense.

      I haven’t been to many funerals — my parents, for example, did not have funerals. I have been to the funerals of beloveds and they have ranged from the memorable to the unforgettable. Subtle difference, I know. I don’t particularly want to remember the “memorable” ones. The “unforgettable” ones changed how I see my life and the world.

      “Edenic beauty. Love that. ❤️🙏

  6. Beth Avatar
    Beth

    This is so very lovely and so very sad. Keep sharing this beauty with us as long as you can and let me know if I can chain myself to your favorite tree to prevent its removal! This is one of the times I hope the federal government will be slow, so slow that the administration will change first. Then, we hopefully will return to our senses.

    My favorite place is Cable Lake Wisconsin in the deep woods of far NW Wisconsin. It has been my heart’s home for my entire life and for generations of our family.

    1. Sharon J. Anderson Avatar

      Cable Lake is paradise, Beth. Adrienne and I had such a good time there in 2014 (has it been that long?). I completely get why it is your place.

      I’m not certain what I will do to prevent the BARC closure. I now have so many favorite trees in BARC that it would be difficult to decide which one you could chain yourself to and which one I could chain myself to. But I believe it would be Ripley — the tree so often featured in my calendars. We can both surround and protect Ripley. Thank you for the offer.💪🙏❤️

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