This Orcas Island Jam Company Transforms Local Plums into Vibrant Seasonal Preserves

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Orcas Island was once covered with thriving orchards, many of which went long-abandoned. Girl Meets Dirt founder Audra Lawlor seeks to revive the local legacy fruit trees by making jam.

If you’re driving the winding roads of Orcas Island in late summer, you can smell the ripening fruit all around. On one such morning last year, I stopped the car at my destination and met Audra Lawlor, owner of, who was surveying one orchard’s recent Italian plum harvest in tall rubber boots and a denim shirt. As we walked among the rows of trees with their full canopies spilling over onto the trail, Audra picked up a fallen plum from the ground and turned it over in her hand between us.

By the end of the 19th century, many inhabitants had made their way over to work the plum orchards and operate the prune dryers , and the economy was surging. The success allowed the building of docks for steamships, as well as a boon for jobs sorting, grading, and packing fruit for transport. It also led to an island that became far more orchard than anything else. The country lane that runs through the center of Orcas Island’s main village is still named Prune Alley.

It was in those early days that Lawlor found a passion for fruit. During her first fall season on the island, the seven fruit trees on her property bore more than 200 pounds of apples and pears. She began making pies and jams but quickly found her kitchen filled with yet more fruit—, and plums—as her new neighbors welcomed her with edible gifts."I fell in love with the sense of abundance on my property, and all around me on the island. I wanted to learn more," she says.

Come Thanksgiving 2013, Lawlor found her kitchen filled with boxes upon boxes of homemade preserves she had taught herself to make. At the urging of family and friends, she created Girl Meets Dirt to do something productive with her newfound hobby. She began producing handmade, organic preserves from the island’s ­century-​old trees, and selling it locally under the small label.As her business grew over the years, so did the need for more fruit and other flavors.

 

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