Tag Archive for: farming

The Setting

The end of October was marked by the Boston Book Festival where I got to schmooze with our non-fiction keynote as well as present DAUGHTER OF A PROMISE at a panel discussion on coming-of-age novels. Around the same time, I learned DOAP won the 2024 American Book Festival Award for Best Literary Fiction!

With Malcolm Gladwell (photo courtesy of Mike Ritter) and my Boston Book Festival panel with Henriette Lazaridis, Caroline Leavitt, moderated by Jessica Keener

After a flurry of bookish and social activity in Boston, John and I returned to Wisconsin and huddled with our team to discuss 2024 accomplishments as well as priorities for Flynn Creek Farm’s 2025 growing season. We have many exciting initiatives in store! I have taken the lead coordinating construction projects and infrastructure installation – and one I’m particularly excited about is the restoration of our barn.

A barn is a critical component of a farm’s setting. Readers of my novels know how much I love to write setting, and I’m sensitive to its importance in real life as well! I treat setting as I would a character. Whether a swanky summer cottage dubbed EDEN, the campus of Dunning Academy in THE NINE, or even the island of Manhattan in DAUGHTER OF A PROMISE, my settings are more than a backdrop for the action. They contribute to the underlying themes of the book by interacting with the human characters in a way that impacts their psyches. You may have a home or a place in your life that functions as such … At Flynn Creek Farm, our old red barn greets people as they first pull off the road and she has been crying out to be spruced up in order to play a more integral role in our operations (and our story).

She’s a classic old dairy barn. Her foundation dates back to the early 1900’s

Barns are iconic structures in agricultural landscapes, especially those with rich dairy heritages like Wisconsin’s. They traditionally represented prosperity, steaming with the livestock that constituted a farmer’s wealth, literally housing a farm’s most valuable assets. Sadly, while driving around our region, I’ve observed many barns in disrepair. Now, they are more of a symbol of endurance as they age and list, even sag. Our neighbor’s was white and very large and beautiful from a distance, but it had become a hazard and this summer he finally tore it down as mandated by his insurance company.

Once a dairy barn, ours was converted with stalls for horses. She had been used most recently for storage although overrun with rodents, barn swallows, bats, and wasps. In 2023, our crew tried to reclaim the space and began cleaning her out, only to discover the interior stalls were coated with lead paint.

John and I rented the strongest power washer we could find and spent one weekend blasting off the lead paint ourselves.

This winter, we plan to take her down to the foundation, creating a structure that both honors her past, while accommodating Flynn Creek Farm’s specific needs. Fingers crossed all goes as planned, but if I’ve learned anything in this life, it’s that construction comes with surprises. With a heart full of faith and a wonderful construction team, we hope to be raising a new barn in early 2025!!

We’ll be honoring her magnificent post-and-beam architecture. I want standing in the new barn to feel like being in the belly of a whale or maybe even a cathedral.

I’ve been taking a class on Flannery O’Connor’s short stories and I imagine the barn in “Good Country People” where Hulga and the Bible salesman climb a ladder into a loft and lie against a hay bale, “a wide sheath of sunlight, filled with dust particles slating over them” to be just like the upper story of our barn pictured above. That got me thinking about other barns in literature… obviously, most of CHARLOTTE’S WEB is set in a barn, and John Steinbeck uses barns in many of his novels, OF MICE AND MEN coming to mind first and foremost. Are there stories or novels that you’ve enjoyed that feature barns prominently?

The People

As for the Book….

 

I’m returning to Boston on October 26th for the Boston Book Festival. I am on a panel will at 11:45am at Old South Church. Hope to see you at what will be my last 2024 East Coast appearance!!

Let’s make a personal connection! Come see me in Boston on 10/26

While presenting DAUGHTER OF A PROMISE, I’m inevitably asked what I’m writing next.  I’m juggling several ideas, actually. While Bets, my recent novel’s protagonist, was gutted by her work on a deal to expand an agri-business client, my newest fictional heroine travels from New York to Nebraska, finding an unexpected sense of place on a farm. No surprise? Fiction aside, I’m drawn to describing eye-opening moments on FLYNN CREEK FARM, the broken food system in general, as well as my historical relationship with food…. So, who knows?… maybe a memoir is in my future.  

As for the Farm…..

 

Speaking of finding a place on a farm, a key part of our mission is to provide career opportunities for young farmers. The average age of a farmer in the US is 60 and trending higher. That statistic combined with the fact that the number of farms are on the decline, paints a picture of a consolidating industry where opportunities to work on the land are disappearing.  Not only are small farms vanishing from the landscape, when they are for sale, their cost is prohibitive for most people starting out.

John and I obviously aren’t traditional small-farmers, out in the fields ourselves or with scads of kids performing chores before school. We are blessed to have recruited a team of young people who believe in our mission and want to work alongside the land, or at least give it a try. We are investing in the professional development and growth of each person who works here.

Creating opportunities to learn from one another

We didn’t solely set out to regenerate the soil, but also the humans who tend it. Although regenerative farming works in collaboration with natural systems, theoretically requiring less human input, this is still freaking hard work! Farming in general is not only hard, but sometimes tragic. Our current food system, which places an inordinate financial burden and risk on farming families, has led to the highest rate of suicide among all professions. I highly recommend viewing Kiss the Ground’s most recent film COMMON GROUND for a heart wrenching and succinct explanation of what farmers are up against.

Although our farm’s mission is multi-faceted, getting the people part right feels most urgent. We’re entering the time of year when budgets and plans are being made for 2025. As CEO, my most important job is designing a paradigm to serve our teams’ needs, one that allows individuals to flourish while taking into account the economic constraints of an early-stage start-up. It’s a balancing act. To be a leader of a regenerative enterprise means working toward a system that values each team member’s essence and creating opportunities that will unleash their potential. It means listening to what each person wants from this experience, and tailoring roles and incentives that fit the unique individual.

                                         
And creating times to eat our veggies and hang out!!

I don’t believe it’s a coincidence that over the past few weeks while attending various farming seminars, I’ve been seated next to consultants who specialize in building high performance agricultural teams. Do we need one more consultant, I’ve wondered?  Possibly. When I mentioned our dream to one of these consultants he remarked that, “Developing our people” was a phrase not typically heard in farming. Another, whom I met at a Kiss the Ground at Climate Week in NY, suggested I listen to Carol Sanford’s THE REGENERATIVE LIFE which has been helpful in shaping my mindset. Oh, and did I mention we also want to ensure Flynn Creek is a fun place to work!?!

A different type of system with a fun culture doesn’t just happen. It takes thought, intention, and presence, following the adage ‘what you pay attention to grows’.  So, while not driving a tractor in the fields, John and I are confident we are doing a most important job on the farm.

If you have thoughts or advice for us, please leave a comment!!

Leave a comment

 

One last plug….

 

The paperback of this wonderful anthology comes out just in time to make meaningful Hanukah gifts!!

The Processing

The essay “The Processing” originally appeared on Jeannie’s Substack, Constantly Curating. Subscribe here for monthly updates!

Happy Autumnal Equinox to those who celebrate 🙂 It’s book festival season. I’ve recently returned from Chicago’s Printers Row Lit Fest and looking forward to the Brooklyn and Boston Book Festivals in the coming weeks. Please come see me!! Spending time with other authors, meeting readers and signing copies of my novels is always a great time. I rushed back to the farm from Chicago, however, because I’d left John processing hundreds of pounds of tomatoes. You see, in addition to book festival season, it’s tomato season with our harvest outpacing what Forage Kitchens can take at one time… and that means preserving them in forms that extend the bounty into the winter. 

Chicago, Printers Row Lit Fest So fun to hang with fellow authors, added another half dozen books to my reading pile!

Processing… aren’t we always? Whether it’s information, experiences, or vegetables we are faced with infinite raw data – and the decision whether to synthesize into something usable, or hit the proverbial “delete” button. I am afraid when it comes to my email inbox I am guilty of the latter these days, but in real life I generally process, or should I say, attempt to make meaning. Finding the space to make someting, to create, well that is the magic.

We are par-boiling, peeling, and coring the tomatoes before they go into air tight bags and into the freezer. Three enormous freezers are filling up!!

Although an abundance of anything is a blessing, with these tomatoes (and now peppers and squash) I am infused with an urgent sense of panic to process, hoping to strike the right balance between what we should preserve and what goes onto the compost pile. This is hard for me because I was raised on the notion waste is evil.

As I write, I’m going into my third consecutive weekend of freezing. and dehydrating, the slicer tomatoes, making sauces and savory jams with the Romas, and blistering the skin off Italian fryer peppers over a flame. I’m channeling a little Barbara Kingsolver – not at the writing desk, but because she is also a role model for us September tomato mavens!! I have to take deep breaths and remind myself that what can’t be preserved will be donated (already sent 40 pounds to the local fire house) and the rest will contribute to our beautiful, rich compost used to promote next year’s growth….the beauty of a regenerative system.

Processing and making meaning is also what I attempt do as a writer… These days I am having an internal debate over what is more satisfying… canning 32 oz jars of tomato sauce to be enjoyed in the mountains on snowy winter evenings or writing the next chapter of my work-in-progress…. hmmmm

land-rich-cash-poor-brian-reisinger-book-review-jeanne-blasberg

Written by a son about his family’s love/hate 100 plus year relationship with farming. Also a primer on the country’s disservice to the family farm.

The drive to and from Chicago provided an opportunity to think about some challenges we are facing on the farm.  As usual, I was kept company by an audiobook. This time it was LAND RICH CASH POOR by Paul Reisinger. Narrated by the author, this memoir describes the perils faced not only by his family farm, but by our nation’s food system in part because of the gradual disappearance of mid-sized family farms.

It concludes with observations I could relate to even at our early stage of the game.  Many mid to small sized farms have problems finding markets for their products.  Organic vegetable farmers routinely set up CSA’s or sell food at a farmer’s markets but those are not the most reliable and consistent source of revenue.  How many times have you gone to a farmers’ market to really stock up on what your family needs for the week? If you do congratulations you’re in the minority. For so many it’s a weekend stroll or curiosity where one might find something unusual for a special meal. It’s not a dependable way for small organic farmers to count on revenue. The CSA model in which consumers buy shares in a farmer’s crops at the beginning of the season has many shortcomings as well. So, what excited John and I so much about the opportunity with Flynn Creek Farm was that being vertically integrated with a fast-casual chain of restaurants in Forage Kitchens meant a steady and stable customer and thus revenue stream. It was also a distribution model that would get our nutrient dense food into the mouths of average people.

 
Tomatoes dried as sauces and jams, a variety of Romas on the vine, and our beautiful Midnight variety which is turning into a rich delicious sauce.

Unfortunately, we are learning how difficult this is.  Number one is price.  Farmers have historically been price takers instead of price makers and the true cost of local organic vegetables is proving hard to pass on. That’s even before getting skittish about passing on the true price of food in an economy where so many are grumbling about exploding food prices. Consumers in the United States have been trained to expect cheap food as is demonstrated by campaign promises to lower food costs by both Presidential candidates.

The second obstacle is logistics. We are realizing that grocery stores and restaurants are set up to order conventional produce from the likes of the Sysco truck with Amazon-like ordering the night before.  Anything taking more thought is a hoop most restaurant managers don’t want to jump through. Especially managers of fast-casual. In addition, their kitchens are small with limited cooler space, their inability to store food for more than two days becoming another reason they order “off the truck.” John and I have learned so much about the planning and timeline that goes into growing our crops, it’s no wonder that the management of a fast-casual restaurant chain isn’t up to speed yet, even a restaurant chain based on the values of fresh, healthy food.

 
Drying shishito peppers, planting lettuce at the end of September, our bumper crop of squash

We are making progress, but it certainly feels like we spend as much effort educating our partners and customers as we do growing outstanding product. My prior two newsletters have centered on my personal growth on the farm, but I want you to hear about all the challenges too! Don’t worry, we are pressing on with this important work. And I will continue to PROCESS what comes my way as if it is my prayer, my primary expression of faith in a crazy world, my belief in the promise of tomorrow.

 

 

Why Farming? Looking Back to Move Forward

The essay “Why Farming? Looking Back to Move Forward” originally appeared on Jeannie’s Substack. Subscribe here for monthly updates!

Last month’s newsletter addressed “Why Wisconsin?” but I probably should have answered this one first,  “Why Farming?”

There are many possible answers …. some I use to satisfy people who need a logical explanation because the truth to “why farming?” is still slowly revealing itself. Would it make sense if I told you John and I had an idea, and given our health, energy and resources felt prepared for an ambitious next act, so we took the leap into something we knew embarrassingly little about, only to later understand why it was meant to be?

Writing and publishing has inured me to fear and helped me develop very personal definitions around what is success and what is failure. Writing and farming both require listening and openness, both require approaching the world with a creative mindset.

THE ILLUMINATION CODE by Kim Chestney encourages finding spaciousness and stillness in order to connect with your innate wisdom and intuition. During COVID, we achieved something akin to that right brain focus while driving thousands of miles around the country, imagining our future. In her book, Chestney makes the point we are all connected by universal energy and a piece of each of us simply knows… everything. She explains “When you activate your connection to the nonlocal dimension, you open up your faculties of sensing, thinking and feeling as channels for expansive information sharing. In this way, the universe becomes a kind of guide, constantly course correcting toward its implicit truth.” I don’t mean to claim farming is our truth, but we are becoming more and more certain it is a critical next step on our path.

Listen:

Write-your-own-story-podcast-wisdom-wellness-and-main-character-energy-with-jeanne-blasberg

Many have stopped reading by now or are shaking their heads, but I believe it requires a rearview mirror perspective to comprehend the plan. Also, it requires an understanding that our journeys are not linear. So, while it is extremely validating to feel healing and peace on the farm at present, there were also clues in my past that I can now point to:

  • An obsession with my vegetable garden and growing food for my family
  • the way references to Madison, WI inexplicably made my ears perk up as, it was more than a curious sensation, but something inside that said “take note.” It was the same when my husband told me we had the opportunity to move to Switzerland. In my mind’s eye I already knew it was going to happen.
  • John and I talking for decades about starting a business in the health and wellness space, or the food space, or creating healthy consumer products, maybe something plant based….
  • A lack of trust in the food system, lending to a dysfunctional relationship with food.
  • A deep concern for the environment,
  • As a little girl, dreaming of being a scientist, of inventing something and conducting experiments.
  • Vegetarianism becoming more than a dietary choice for me. It now feels political as well as spiritual.
  • And then there’s the fact that I am most happy problem solving as part of a team… This solitary writing life comes with a price 🙂

Listen:

In another recent read, Alicia Kennedy’s NO MEAT REQUIRED: THE CULTURAL HISTORY & CULINARY FUTURE of PLANT-BASED EATING, I learned the term “Ecofeminism.” It gels with my sense that women will be the ones to lead the way out of this broken food system and environmental crisis. Making another point, Kennedy asserts, “The food that is broadly consumed in our country is created to fulfill the desires of capitalism not our bodies, with no regard for the long term health consequences.” Becoming a farmer is a productive and positive way to take a stand against industrial, corporate farming in favor of regional, seasonal food systems that emphasizes biodiversity and dignified lives for farmers.

Listen:

Life-stories-podcast-growing-change-jeanne-blasberg-on-regenerative-farming-and-supplying-local-restaurants

Interestingly, I’ve come to think of my writing career as the necessary gateway into farming. Writing and publishing has inured me to fear and helped me develop very personal definitions around what is success and what is failure. Writing and farming both require listening and openness, both require approaching the world with a creative mindset. Being close to the land offers daily ways to be creative, take our diet for example—it is incredible how much on our farm can be foraged for meals, not to mention how a bumper crop of zucchini or tomato has us brainstorming ways to preserve and prepare. We are constantly addressing challenges – a day something doesn’t break on a farm is an unusually great day! The generosity in a rural setting is heart-warming. I am in awe of the people I have met in my new community: independent, self-reliant geniuses who look out for one another. In this setting, I am a complete beginner which is very rejuvenating.

I conclude with a plug for a new writing project (it’s relevant!!) :

on-being-jewish-now-anthology-zibby-owens-jeanne-blasberg-essays

Honored to have an essay included in this powerful anthology

To preorder or learn more about ON BEING JEWISH NOW

It’s relevant because the passage below, although meant to be taken metaphorically, is one I have always been drawn to in our liturgy. It recalls our ancestors’ agrarian mindset and expresses a Jewish value I aim to live by:

And when you reap the harvest of your land, you shall not wholly reap the corners of your field, neither shall you gather the gleanings of your harvest; you shall leave them for the poor and the stranger.

Listen:

aging-well-coming-back-to-the-land-for-the-first-time-why-farming-podcast-bestselling-author-jeanne-blasberg-and-life-on-flynn-creek-farm

COME SEE ME:

On Tour with DAUGHTER OF A PROMISE:

Sept 7/8 Printer’s Row Literary Festival, Chicago, IL

September 29, The Brooklyn Book Festival Brooklyn, NY

October 26, The Boston Book Festival. Boston, MA

and TALKING FARMING:

October 12, National Farmer’s Day, Flynn Creek Farm is one of the sponsors of the COMMON GROUND screening and will have a table at Monona Terrace in Madison, WI

books-think-like-an-ecosystem-mary-oliver-devotions-celestial-garden-jeanne-blasberg-why-farming

Great companions on our recent boat trip

 

 

Why Wisconsin? Inheritance, Migration, and Finding Home

The essay “Why Wisconsin? Inheritance, Migration, and Finding Home” originally appeared on Jeannie’s Substack. Subscribe here for monthly updates!

wisconsin-minnesota-ice-hockey-UW-badgers

UW vs Minnesota Men’s Ice Hockey, January 2024

It’s a question I get a lot these days. “Do you or John have family in Wisconsin?”

People seem truly puzzled about our migration when I explain never having set foot into the state until three years ago… that we had been searching for a way to get into farming when we reconnected with an old family friend who encouraged us to visit Madison. One thing led to another, and we trusted the opportunities that kept showing up on our path. We love where we’ve landed, the rolling hills and water, the food culture, and the civic pride.

I’m one of those people who can’t easily answer the question, “Where are you from?” And, “Why Wisconsin?” follows suit, but the question has had me reflecting on my weird relationships with place…

My first novel, EDEN, is about a family’s devotion to their summer tradition, specifically a matriarch’s dedication to a home and the small seaside town where her family goes back for generations.  I wrote it from a desk in such a community, feeling the outsider, while observing and envying the generational ties I witnessed all around.

jeanne-blasberg-holding-book-daughter-of-a-promise-in-westerly-rhode-island--inspiration-for-long-harbor-in-front-of-the-ocean

A recent visit to the Ocean House in Watch Hill, RI to discuss DAUGHTER OF A PROMISE. This place was the inspiration for Long Harbor, a setting featured in all three of my novels.

A few months before EDEN’s publication, John and I traveled to Iceland where we spent a day with a guide named Thor. At the end of an adventurous afternoon, he showed us a plaque with a picture of farmers. “These are my ancestors, and this was their farm,” he said.

“How long has your family been in Iceland?” I asked. It’s the type of question that rolls off my tongue naturally, or maybe any American’s tongue, but he looked at me confused. I realized my foolishness when he answered, “My family has always been in Iceland, since the beginning.”

jeanne-blasberg-iceland-trip-travel-couple-with-waterfall

Exploring Iceland in 2017

Much as DAUGHTER OF A PROMISE’s protagonist, Betsabé, wonders what her outlook would have been if she’d been raised differently, I never got over Thor’s reply.  How might my human experience have been shaped if I’d felt such a connection to one specific place? If I walked the same land as my ancestors since the beginning of time! Before my grandparents, I don’t have much knowledge of the places my ancestors lived.

The closest thing for me was when John and I moved to Boston in 1994. I looked forward to living in a city where his family was established, where our last name meant something. Upon meeting me, people would ask, “Oh, are you related to Arthur? Are you married to his son?”

And I would answer “Yes,” and when they asked which son I was married to, the simplest reply was “Not the doctor.”

At that time in my life, stability was medicine. It was healing to raise our children with a sense of tradition which included schools, a congregation, and “our” beloved Chinese restaurant, three generations gathered around a large round table in the corner, spinning a Lazy Susan’s bounty, sharing a weekly feast. I made the city home for twenty-five years, interrupted only by a three-year stint in Switzerland.

I once considered my parents’ moving around as unfortunate, New York, Newport Beach, Dallas, Naples, as preventing my feeling connected to any one place. I’m sure others can resonate. Our country is one of immigrants or descendants of immigrants, with brave stories that make mine sound frivolous. There is something distinctly American about moving. (According to the US Census Bureau, about 1 in 10 people move every year. In 2022, about 8.2 million people moved between states.)

flynn-creek-carm-wisconsin-organic-regenerative-agriculture-farming-tomatoes

The beauty of tomatoes ready to burst at Flynn Creek Farm, July 2024

At the age of 58, I consider my willingness and ability to move a blessing. I think of the perspective that comes with being a stranger in a new land as character building. I know COVID inspired many people to move and also made moving possible. For example, we landed in Utah in the winter of 2021 although to a mixed reception. Salt Lake City and Park City represent a region with limited natural resources and a massive influx of people. Montrose Township, Wisconsin with its population of 1,100, however, was a different story. Although many in our new community can’t quite figure out why we’re here, most are pleased we are preserving 420 acres as agricultural, even if our regenerative, organic veggie farming might have them scratching their heads.

Why Wisconsin? I don’t have a logical answer, but as crazy as it seems, in all of my uprootedness, this place feels like a place to blossom. If you’ve made a move or have a point of view on moving, I’d love to hear from you in the comments!!

If you enjoyed Jeannie’s recommendations of COVID novels, read more of her book reviews on her blog, on Goodreads or StoryGraph, or on the New York Journal of Books. For more TBR inspiration, check out Jeannie’s curated book lists at Bookshop.org and Shepherd.com

Soil and Spirit by Scott Chaskey

Soil and Spirit: Cultivation and Kinship in the Web of Life by Scott Chaskey

soil-and-spirit-scott-chasky-jeanne-blasberg-book-reviewI listened to the audio version of this book of essays as I walked our farm in the afternoons. Scott Chaskey’s reading voice as well as his poetic prose provided a meditative and spiritual accompaniment to those outings. These essays honor his work as well as the work of many land and seed stewards across the globe. They were also accessible to people who aren’t in farming as well and touched this beginning farmer in a way that sparked a sense of knowing and curiosity.

bookshop-support-local-bookstores

 

About Soil and Spirit:

As a farmer with decades spent working in fields, Scott Chaskey has been shaped by daily attention to the earth. A leader in the international Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) movement, he has combined a longstanding commitment to food sovereignty and organic farming with a belief that humble attention to microbial life and diversity of species provides invaluable lessons for building healthy human communities.

Along the way, between “planning the rotations of fields, ordering seeds and supplies, and watching the weather,” Chaskey was “always writing, poetic stanzas or pages to piece together a book.” And in this lively collection of essays, he explores the evolution of his perspective–as a farmer and as a poet. Tracing the first stage in his development back to a homestead in Maine, on the ancestral lands of the Abenaki, he recalls learning to cultivate plants and nourish reciprocal relationships among species, even as he was reading Yeats and beginning to write poems. He describes cycling across Ireland, stopping to taste blackberries and linger in the heather before meeting Seamus Heaney, and farming in Cornwall’s ancient landscape of granite, bramble, and twisted trees. Later in life, he travels to China for an international conference on Community Supported Agriculture, reading ancient wilderness poetry along the way, and then on to the pueblo of Santa Clara in New Mexico, where he joins a group of Indigenous women harvesting amaranth seeds. Closer to home on the Southfork of Long Island, he describes planting redwood saplings and writing verse in the shade of an ancient beech tree.

“Enlivened by decades of work in open fields washed by the salt spray of the Atlantic”—words that describe his prose as well as his vision of connectedness—Scott Chaskey has given us a book for our time. A seed of hope and regeneration in a time of widespread despair.

Read more of Jeannie’s Reviews on her blog, on Goodreads or StoryGraph, or on the New York Journal of Books. For more TBR inspiration, check out Jeannie’s curated book lists at Bookshop.org