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The Wedding Gift
Friends and family raise a barn, and some community spirit, at the farmhouse wedding of Kirsten Walter '00 and Ben Ayers '99
Photographs by Phyllis Graber Jensen


The Wedding Gift
Photographs by Phyllis Graber Jensen

Kirsten Walter ’00 and Ben Ayers ’99 didn’t register for traditional wedding gifts — eschewing the deep-sided pie dish, $17.99 at Macy’s — but instead asked friends and family to contribute to a barn-raising at their ca. 1800 farmhouse in Leeds, Maine.

The photo below and slide show at left show the gift being given. For two days prior to their Sept. 15 wedding — held in the completed barn — scores of family and friends, including some three dozen Bates alums, gathered to raise the frame and enclose the new building.

The raising culminated weeks of framework that commenced in earnest when barn designer Brad Morse ’99 arrived in August. He, along with Ayers and father-son neighbors Bruce and Nat Bell, formed a core team that cut the hemlock, milled the timbers at Bell’s farm, and cut the frame behind the brick farmhouse.


Ben Ayers '99 hammers pegs on Day One of the barn-raising as neighbor Kevin Hudner, an experienced timber-framer, steadies the beam.

As the gift of time, expertise, and funds grew large, the couple got uneasy about not being able to give back, “other than some homemade jams,” says Walter with a smile. Guidance came from two mentors, Gloria and Gregg Varney of nearby Nezinscot Farm, who said this: “Asking for help is the biggest way to build trust.”

The truism resonated with the couple, whose careers involve building communities by building trust — she as founder of the urban-agriculture nonprofit Lots To Gardens, he as project director for the dZi Foundation, serving Himalayan communities. “We decided to accept everything that was happening,” says Walter, “and to feel incredibly honored by the trust, community, and friendships it helped us build.”

— H. Jay Burns

 

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Historically Black: Spelman and Morehouse colleges offer something that Bates can't — and that's just the point
The Wedding Gift: Friends and family raise a barn, and some community spirit, at the farmhouse wedding of Kirsten Walter '00 and Ben Ayers '99
It's a Microworld After All: MicroVest’s Gil Crawford ’80 takes the lead as private investors surge into the microfinance world
Brand Width: John Hassan '82 helps ESPN cover all the bases
Composition One-on-One: Students teach students as writing becomes an explicit value of the Bates curriculum
Of Climate, Clams, and Colleagues: Arctic clams are sentinels of climate change, says biology professor Will Ambrose. But he didn’t find that out by himself



Postcards from Bates: A few picture stories from the print issue
Bates Matters: THE BELIEVING GAME — Peer editing demands a desceptively simple act of faith
Open Forum: Opinions, stories, and comments from the Bates community
PreAmble: Balanced Beam
Quad Angles: A selection of news stories from the College
Scene Again: 1980 — The Iran Hostage Crisis
Sports Notes: A SMASHING RETURN — Tennis coach Paul Gastonguay '89 runs a program that wins matches and respect.
Connections: Crooning and Swooming — the Bates Deansmen celebrate 50 years with a campus gathering
Your Page: BOB'S JOB SAYS GOODBYE — “Your job has been outsourced to India.”
Vital Statistics: Honoring life's milestones
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