Our Story
Our farm exists on family land that was once a working dairy farm run by generations before us. Returning to this place felt less like starting something new and more like answering a calling—to care for the land well and to honor what it had been while allowing it to become something healthier and more resilient for the future.
As our family grew, we also found ourselves on a personal health journey. In the process, we experienced firsthand the difference that real, thoughtfully produced food can make. What began as a desire to feed our own family well—especially our five children—quickly expanded into a deeper awareness of how closely human health, land health, and community are connected. We learned that self-sufficiency alone isn’t the goal; meaningful resilience is built through relationships and shared responsibility.
Over time, our focus turned toward the soil itself. Soil is often overlooked and misunderstood, yet it is foundational to everything that grows from it. Through regenerative practices and careful observation, we use animals as an essential part of restoring biological life to the land. Fields that once produced poor forage have gradually transitioned into diverse, productive pasture, and areas that were reverting to forest have been thoughtfully reclaimed and stewarded back into use. These changes didn’t happen quickly, and they weren’t the result of shortcuts—they came from patience, observation, and a willingness to adapt.
Every decision we make is guided by a long-term view. We continually ask whether an action will provide lasting benefit to the land, our family, and the people we serve. We observe the outcomes of our choices and adjust as needed, understanding that stewardship is an ongoing process rather than a fixed system.
We serve a small community of families who value trustworthy food and care deeply about how it is produced. Our farm is intentionally small and family-based. It isn’t designed to be polished or large-scale, and that is by design. The real wealth being created here isn’t always visible—it lives in the health of the soil, the strength of relationships, and the character being formed in our children.
For us, success isn’t measured by expansion or output alone. It looks like raising grounded, capable kids, caring for the land with integrity, and contributing something honest and lasting to the people and place we’re connected to.

