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Sustaining a Family Farm by Deborah
Wechsler (2004)
Elmwood Stock
Farm Georgetown, Kentucky http://www.elmwoodstockfarm.com/
Elmwood Stock Farm is a multi-generational
family farm producing a wide variety of crops and livestock. The
Bell family, long-time farmers of Black Angus cattle and burley
tobacco, began to diversify about ten years ago as a way to help the
farm survive. When Ann came home from college, she began raising
vegetables for retail sale at farmers’ markets in Georgetown and
Lexington. Her brother, John, focused on raising vegetables on a
larger scale for wholesale markets.
A few years later, Ann met Mac Stone at a
Southern SAWG conference. Mac, farm manager for the Kentucky State
University Research Farm, was also raising organic beef and
vegetables on his own at the time. “Mac introduced us to some new
ideas,” says Ann, “like organic production and raising pastured
poultry.” They began farming together in 1998 and were married in
2002. Their farm is now the largest certified organic farm in
Kentucky.
Each
family member has areas of responsibility--Ann’s father, Cecil Bell,
Jr., manages the beef cattle, hay, and tobacco; her brother, John
Bell, manages the major vegetable crops, transplants, and farm
labor; and Mac and Ann manage the organic poultry, lamb, and
marketing. The whole family is involved in large farm decisions and
meets over breakfast each Wednesday to plan and update each
other.
Half of the farm’s income now is from the
younger generation’s enterprises, and each year the acreage that is
certified organic has increased. Their main wholesale produce crops
are potatoes and tomatoes. For farmers’ market, they also raise a
wide variety of vegetables, plus herbs, strawberries, and a few
blueberries and blackberries. They’ve learned they can successfully
raise potatoes, cole crops, lettuce, and herbs organically, but with
tomatoes, peppers, and cucurbits, for example, it is difficult for
them to raise a marketable crop organically. For these crops, they
use the same organic techniques, soil amendments, and foliar feeds,
scout crops carefully, apply IPM threshold levels, and use a lot
less spray than most conventional farmers. Recently, they began
experimenting with organic tobacco.
Barley is their main cover crop—they save their
own seed--along with some hairy vetch. Rotations generally consist
of one or two years in vegetables and winter cover crops, then three
or four years in alfalfa. For crops raised on plastic, such as
tomatoes, peppers, and strawberries, they use drip irrigation, but
they also have some “big gun” overhead irrigation for tobacco and
other field crops. Water is drawn from the large creek that crosses
the farm.
One new project--large-scale, on-farm
composting--involves everyone and will benefit all parts of the
farm. Compost is made from stable cleanings from local horse farms,
other local manure, and produce scraps from local produce packing
co-ops—often as much as 6-8 dump truckloads a week, plus clay. They
have purchased a screener and plan to sell bagged compost at the
market and to nurseries as well as to use it on the
farm.
Elmwood Stock Farm raises and sells certified
organic beef, lamb, eggs, and chicken, and turkey. Cattle, sheep and
poultry run on the same pasture. The poultry forage within a 40x40
electric-net enclosure with a 10x10 moveable hoophouse. They are
locked in the house at night for protection from predators, and the
enclosure and house are moved every few days. The farm uses some
temporary fencing for the larger stock, but the rotation is informal
in relatively large pastures. Pastures are mostly cool season
grasses mixed with red and white clover.
While the farm receives a premium for its
organic meat and eggs, increased costs, mostly for feed, directly
offset these premiums. “Access to organically grown feed for the
chickens has been a real challenge for us,” says Ann. “We are
actually traveling to Ohio to purchase it, and the cost of feed for
our organic laying hens is four times that of conventional feed.” To
process the beef and lamb, they haul their animals to a
USDA-approved processing plant about an hour away (USDA inspection
is required to sell any meat at all in Kentucky). With no commercial
processing facility for poultry in the whole state of Kentucky
accessible to farmers who are not raising poultry on contract for
large corporations, last year they had to haul their poultry to a
USDA-inspected plant in Missouri, five hours away. “If we knew it
would be such a challenge, we might not have started,” says Ann,
“but there was such a demand at the market for organic chickens, we
just really wanted to try to meet that demand.” Fortunately, a new
USDA-inspected poultry processing plant—only a couple hours away--is
due to begin operation this spring, encouraged by the success of a
pilot “Mobile Processing Unit,” a cooperative project of the Heifer
Project and the KSU Research Farm, designed to test the market for
farmers and potential processors.
Recently Ann and Mac also began to experiment
with raising a European-style variety of chicken, the “Rainbow”, for
an even higher quality product. The Rainbow offers a higher
percentage of flavorful dark meat, but takes half again as long to
reach maturity. They’ll be watching the cost of raising the birds
and the prices they can reasonably expect customers to pay to see if
they can profitably raise this new variety.
Ann and Mac sell at two farmers’ markets and to
restaurants, and offer home delivery. They use coolers to haul their
meat and poultry products to the markets and restaurants. Their main
outlet is the thriving farmers’ market in the college town of
Lexington, 30 minutes away. On Saturdays, both Ann and Mac go, and
she employs a few helpers from Lexington, but it is Ann herself that
customers look for, so Ann is there most days of the week. Their
customers’ appreciation makes a big difference to them: “It is so
much work and you’re not really making much money, but then you have
a customer who shows how much they appreciate what you are doing,
and that keeps you going,” says Mac.
And appreciate it they do. Says Mac, “People
tell us [the meat] tastes the way it used to, or the way it is
supposed to, and that you don’t have to worry about what is in it.
People eat our lamb who had given it up because they didn’t like the
flavor before. We get a lot of repeat customers who seek us out, and
when they travel, they buy extra to take with them. Customers say
that ours are the only chicken and eggs they will eat now.” The same
goes for their produce. Says chef Ouita Michels, “I love their stuff
because of its taste, look, smell, feel, color, vibrancy, absolute
freshness and quality. Everything they bring to me is nearly
perfect... tiny white eggplant, huge luscious dripping black Russian
tomatoes, beautiful lettuces and greens, poblanos to die for… my
menus would be lost without that farm and their
efforts.”
While Ann and Mac are the faces the public
meets at the market, the whole family is working together to
increase the sustainability of Elmwood Stock Farm. “We’re still in a
transition from traditional cattle and tobacco farming to something
that is more durable,” says Mac. “We’re in it for the long haul.
We’ve made a vow that not on our watch will we lose this place to
developers.”
Location: Central Kentucky, near
Georgetown and Lexington Climate zone: 6 Soil
type: Rich, limestone-base loams Years in commercial
production: Family farm for generations; diversification and
organic starting in mid-1990s. Acreage: 750 total. 475 are
certified organic, with 400 in pasture, 75 in vegetable
rotation. Crops/products: Beef cattle (organic and
conventional); 60-70 acres vegetables, some of it organic; organic
chickens, turkeys and eggs; 35 acres of tobacco (mostly
conventional; experimenting with organic) Value-added
products: Beef cuts, wrapped and frozen Notable
facilities and equipment: Three greenhouses for tobacco and
vegetable plants, salad crops Weeks in production: Produce
spring-fall; meat sales year-round. Markets: Direct sales
to consumers at farmers’ markets and home delivery; deliveries to
restaurants Labor: Family labor (four adults), plus
seasonal farm workers and market helpers |

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