58 Acres, Still Learning

A working farm in the middle of changing how it farms

We are transitioning to organic near the lakeshore by Glenn, Michigan — season by season. The work is ongoing and the berries reflect it.

Close-up of blueberry plant base, rich dark soil visible at the roots, decaying leaf mulch layered around the stem, soft side-light from the left, shallow depth of field with the lakeshore blurred in the far background
Close-up of blueberry plant base, rich dark soil visible at the roots, decaying leaf mulch layered around the stem, soft side-light from the left, shallow depth of field with the lakeshore blurred in the far background
— Honest About the Process

We are not done. That is the point.

Transitioning to organic certification takes years of documented soil and crop management. Our 58 acres are mid-process — not certified yet, but every input decision is made with that end in view.

When you pick here this summer, you are picking from a farm that is actively changing. The fruit is real, the commitment is real, and the timeline is honest.

Two hands holding a small cluster of blueberries in various ripeness stages — deep indigo to pale green — photographed at eye level in a blueberry row, natural ambient light filtered through leaf canopy, soil and mulch visible underfoot
Two hands holding a small cluster of blueberries in various ripeness stages — deep indigo to pale green — photographed at eye level in a blueberry row, natural ambient light filtered through leaf canopy, soil and mulch visible underfoot
• Regenerative Practices

What goes into the ground changes the berry

Regenerative practice here means reducing synthetic inputs season by season, building soil biology with cover crops and compost, and observing what the land responds to. Acre by acre, not all at once.

The lakeshore microclimate — cooler mornings, lake-effect humidity, longer ripening window — is part of the equation. Soil health amplifies what the location already provides.

The land is the reason the berries are worth picking

Located off Blue Star Highway near Glenn, our fields sit close enough to Lake Michigan that the water shapes our seasons. We are tending this land deliberately, and we want you to see it.