The Many Tendrils of this Root System

Surprise! This is a guest newsletter from Caitlin, the fourth root and delinquent OG blog post writer who hasn't written a blog post in ... 5 years? 7 years? ... and who, very characteristically, is late writing this February post in March! Very few things never change in the world, but apparently my inability to write a blog post on time is one of them.

Somewhat unbelievably, 2024 is our tenth growing season here in East Haddam. Next winter will usher in our second decade on this land, and we have taken this season’s hibernation as an opportunity to reflect on where we started, where we are today, and all the many ways we hope this wild experiment will continue to evolve in the next decade. As you’ve followed along through our first ten years, you’ve seen how we’ve built and designed and tweaked and overhauled, bit by bit making a farm business that can sustain our family on this land. We’re very proud to be where we are today. 

As we map out our next ten years, we are always working to find a balance between planning what we can plan and staying agile and resilient in the face of what we can’t control – so we develop longer-term ecological management practices, weigh the hard math of building a new barn, and work on improved stormwater infrastructure, all while being, frankly, dumbstruck by the amount of rain we’ve gotten this winter and wary of what strange weather this summer will bring. As ever, we live every day with both a sense of immediacy and a long view of time.

Poised at this inflection point between our first ten years and our next ten, lots of things snap into focus. A reality that binds together many of our thoughts is the exciting, scary, hilarious realization that we are not the new, young farmers anymore. Like something that inches so slowly you don’t notice season to season, and then boom you can’t believe how far you’ve moved from where you started, we have arrived at a point where we are now the seasoned ones; we are well-connected in our community, and have developed tendrils outward from our beloved farmstead into many other vibrant and vital parts of our regional food system. 

We are so lucky to be a close-knit team of four partners with four distinct and diverse sets of skills, four different areas of expertise, and four unique callings that get us out of bed in the morning; we don’t take this partnership for granted, and are grateful every day that we’re able to do the work we do together. We are also immensely grateful for our amazing team, the incredible people that have cycled through our farm over the years, taken on leadership roles, started their own farms, and, person by person and season by season, strengthened our regional food system. We see our work as farmers as a piece of a larger project to rebuild that system, and over the last nine years, our work has expanded beyond the borders of the farm to include advocacy, policy work, design and building projects, and community- and collective-building.

We’re excited to give you a fuller picture of this web of enterprises, so over the course of the season we will be doing deeper dives into some of this work. Stay tuned for further information about Aaron’s work founding and growing CT Greenhouse, my work developing design and real estate projects to build regional food infrastructure in our home region, Kiersten’s work providing badly needed bookkeeping and accounting services tailored to farmers, our participation in local commissions and agencies, and more! Along these lines, in case you missed it – check out the feature Kiersten wrote about the Connecticut Flower Collective, which Elise is a co-founding member of, in last August’s blog post.

- Caitlin