We're very happy to have this opportunity to present ourselves to you via the World Wide Web. You may access our site by clicking the buttons to your left!
Our Vegetable Farm
We're a "family farm" in continuous operation for over 100 years producing 500 acres of mixed crops annually. We specialize in Spinach and Cauliflower. To find out more About Us, follow this link!
Cauliflower
Follow this link and you'll find out why apples aren't the only way to "keep the doctor away". We'll also tell you a little bit about the industry and show you a few photos of us in action, so click here!
Spinach
Have you heard about free radicals, antioxidants and the "fountain of youth" ? Click here and we'll tell you why Spinach is so good for you and where it all comes from!
Recipes
We think we're qualified to "know a thing or two" about cooking and preparing Cauliflower and Spinach. If you're drawing a blank about "supper tonight", maybe our Recipes will jar something loose!
Web Links
Take a look at our WebLinks, we think there'll be a few that will make it into your Bookmark folder. We've got weather, prices, production guides, newsletters and more. Curious yet? If so, click this button !
Contact Us
We are striving to become a "customer-driven" company. We see the Internet as a tool to help us to change and evolve through your input. Click here to Contact Us, we need to hear from you!
Online Poll
Please complete a quick 30 second online survey, results are live and available to you !
The Hidden Biosphere - Most of the species, and at least 1/2 of the mass of the earth's living ecosystem is microscopic, invisible to the human eye. It is now thought that there are 4000 unique species (mostly unidentified) of bacteria within a single gram of soil alone. As farmers, we participate within an immense soil - microbial system, which has been quite literally, 100's of millions of years in the making.
We know less about life in the earth under our feet than we do about the far side of the moon. Yet every plant and animal you can think of depends on this vast hidden ecosystem.
Earthworms are bio-indicators of the soil's fertility. In temperate climates they are the third most important component of the soil's biomass, representing between 1-3 t/ha depending on whether they are agricultural or forest soils. Aristotle, more than 2,000 years ago,
qualified the role of earthworms as "the intestines of the soil", thereby recording their vital role in soil fertility.