Forest Stewardship Certification

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Leafhopper Farm is now a Washington State Forest Stewardship property! Liz Crain completed the six week class through Washington State University on October 31, 2017. The farm now has a documented forestry plan, meaning there is a written record of tasks and plans for the wooded and soon to be wooded areas of the farm. Because of the some what unique circumstances of Leafhopper Farm, including its permaculture design which bridges agriculture and forestry. The plan has many new features of forestry planning (such as mushroom cultivation) written in. There is also a lot of food forest talk, meaning nut trees mixed in with native under-story trees like vine maple which makes good tool wood (handles for shovels and chisels).

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The Forest Stewardship Plan meshes well with the King Conservation District Farm Plan. Both are guided by county regulation, and encourage land owners to play an active part in maintaining the land for the betterment of future generations. These concepts are not unique to Washington, and I would encourage everyone with land reading this to take a look at what kind fo stewardship planning your county offers. It’s a great way to learn more about your property, take action in maintaining health on your land, and enjoying the financial discounts that proactively engaging with your land can bring. In King County Washington, you do not have to have a lot of acreage to receive great financial incentives. So, even you postage stamp nesters or even multi-unit homes can steward the property with intention.

At Leafhopper Farm, we strive to better the landscape through holistic stewardship. We do not use chemicals to enhance the soil, or feed our animals anything other than USDA certified grains from a local mill. Weiss Creek is getting a generous stream buffer, which will be fenced in this winter. The materials bought to build a goof fence are partially paid for by KDC in a cost share program. They will also pay Liz $20/hr for her work putting up the fence. It’s a win win for all, with the county getting a commitment from the land owner to protect the salmon bearing stream, while offering cash to pay for the fencing and labor, giving Liz a wage for her work! It will also ensure the long lasting protection of sensitive riparian areas of the land, enriching the salmon populations of Washington, and maybe even, the greater West Coast.

For Liz, receiving the coveted Forest Stewardship sign is a landmark event she’s dreamed up since first becoming a land owner. It will be the first of many plaques she plans to work towards in her quest for conservation and biodiversity at Leafhopper Farm. Next on the docket for property improvement is a Public Benefits Rating System application (PBRS). This system adds up all the value added assets of your property, a salmon bearing stream for instance. Each asset has a point attached to it, and the more you have, the better your rating for public benefit. What do the points get you? Well, up to a 90% property tax reduction, which Leafhopper Farm does have the potential of earning. What’s the catch? You have to remain enrolled and participating for a full 10 years or you have to pay back the taxes, plus a 20% penalty. This sounds harsh, but it prevents people from making false commitments to the land.

Stewardship of place is about recognizing that the land is going to outlive you. Trees take several generations to reach maturity, rivers and lakes, streams and oceans will be flowing long after our blip in this living timeline. Holding the land in trust is an honor, and land ownership, though controversial for some, means responsibility and caring to me. My actions today will dictate the shape of things to come. There are also so many factors out of my hands, most of them acts of nature I cannot, and shall not attempt to dictate. May this wisdom carry on to future generations, along with the health and happiness already flowing freely from the landscape.

 

Growth 2017

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Leafhopper Farm has been growing for 5 full years now; on July 31st, we begun our sixth. It has been a wonderful unfolding of tended soil, grazing animals, and a budding community. Above is one season of growth in the Asparagus bed. I wrote about the lone stalk earlier this Spring, and now there are three additional friends joining to create a green party. We might get to harvest some in 2018. For now, the plants are encouraged to grow and seed as they wish, encouraging larger roots for greater production next year.

The growth of the farm’s Asparagus is a great metaphor for the farm its self; start small, grow slow, and keep adding every year. Highlights from this year’s growth include more goats (including a new buck), double our chicken hatching with help from the incubator, a farm manager, wildflower pollination stations, kittens, an outdoor kitchen, more community garden space, native plant instillation, raspberry patch, and much more!

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The Cascadia Hops Humulus lupulus are looking great. I’ll have the largest harvest ever at Leafhopper Farm this fall. Young hop buds are full of sticky yellow resin located in the Lupulin glands, and the scent of its essential oil is overpowering. Hops are part of the Cannabaceae family, and are very medicinal in nature, like their other relatives. The past two years of harvest have produced great beer attempts. This year, they will also be dried and stored for use in future batches of bitter drink. The roots will then be relocated into their own space away from the front garden to allow them plenty of place to expand.

That expansion is felt at the farm this year, both in living space, garden space, and dreaming space; for the future of this land and the community enjoying it. We’ll host classes, students, teachers, farmers, activists, inventors, horticulturists, writers, WWOOFers, service men and women, children, feminists, mothers, fathers, grandparents, elders, story tellers, and guests still unknown. Weiss Creek is singing her song through our drought and the pond still hosts fish.

So much gratitude to all the people who use this place, from the two legged to the four legged, creeping ones, and the winged ones; all are here to grow with us, all will add to the web of life. Thanks for the chance to build this dream, together with so many others who support and share such positive energy. The land is ready to be asked for its blessings of abundance. Though stewardship, the earth gives endlessly to all who work with her in splendid harmony.

Parting Shot:

Muir caught a mouse this week, and reveled in his skill as a hunter. This is the original instructions for domesticated felines. He will be an invaluable support to the future growth of Leafhopper by keeping the rodents at bay.  Though his work, we have eliminated all toxic baits from the land to protect owls and raptors who also help to hunt  prolific vermin. The cats are new working animals we’ve teamed up with this year, and comforting when engaged in furry, purring cuddles.

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photo courtesy of Annika

A Listed Farm!

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That’s right! Leafhopper Farm is listed in our local Sno-Valley Tilth Directory. It’s great to see the farm information out and about in full color. My little blurb reads well and sums up what we do here. What a wonderful chance to share with the community!

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I will say that Leafhopper is on word and we do also have farm sales (not shown in our symbols at the base of the description). On the map “farm” is left out of our name, but it’s a free service for our membership in the tilth community so I’m thrilled with the advertising.

The map below shows a small part of the agricultural activity going on in The Snoqualmie Valley. Our tilth organization focuses on organic and sustainable farming, so that’s what’s represented on this map. #13 is right under the “ll” in Duvall. I’m happy to be located out of the flood plane (shaded in blue). It’s also nice to see other farms springing up beyond the fertile bottom land of our valley.

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What is tilth? Well, it’s the rich soil that’s ready to plant.  Sno-Valley Tilth is a community non-profit which works for organic farmers in The Snoqualmie Valley. Tilth organizations are found all over the country, and most work to educate, advertise, market, and advise local farms in their area. They are farmer run, to make sure those that know are directing, and I highly suggest that if you love local food, even if your not a producer, join your local tilth organization. We have monthly meetings on topis ranging from weed and pest control to county regulations and legal aid. Special guest speakers educate us on the latest resources, laws, and even what’s happening internationally with farming.

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Brownie, Bran, and Branwin grace the back cover

You do not have to live in a rural place to be part of a tilth community. Seattle has its own Tilth Aliance, a big organization which works with urban farmers and city food production with the same enthusiasm as our own Sno-Valley Tilth. If there is not a tilth organization near you, ask a local farmer if they have a support network, if they say “no”, maybe it’s time to start one. This is how small farms are thriving in a commercial industrialized world. That industry is not conducive to sustainable food growing and the fertility of the soil. If we do not move away from big agriculture, we’re going to loos our land, farms, and communities. Healthy fresh food does not have to be a luxury item if the farmers growing it are receiving a living wage and supported to be organic, small, and sustainable.

2nd Year Anniversary of the land!

On July 31st, 2013 I was headed back from Seward Park in a sweaty van with a bunch of gregarious fellow camp instructors when the phone rang. It was my relator Rick, letting me know the keys for the double wide were in his office, along with the final copy of my bill of sales for a 9.8 acre parcel outside of Duvall, WA. At that moment, a huge clap of thunder split the air and Rick and I both paused in stunned silence as the rolling continued through its momentous roar. There was no rain, just the break in what had been an extremely tense day of mounting dark clouds.

The release of the heavens came as my shoulders felt the weight of this new responsibility and the commitment to a vision taking very real form. In that thunderstorm, I walked the land for the first time as its steward. Lighting flashed in celebration, as I danced, along with two friends, who witness my celebratory greeting in tears, to the trees, stream, grasses, and all the thriving life of the land that had so captured my heart. Here now I would have a home, place, and footing to start on an epic quest to cultivate abundance for the future needs which are fast approaching as we the people continue to grow.

Giving has been instilled in me by the generosity I have received from others in this life. Such abundance motivates me to cultivate place for more abundance to give. Finding that expect place, and figuring what I would do one there, has reached full fruition over the past two decades. Location is everything, and Washington has everything in my vision from diverse ecosystems suited to human habitation and thriving, to openminded people with a more progressive outlook on the world. There are glaciers, ocean, forests, rainforests, deserts, dunes, rivers, lakes, and about any natural feature you can imagine in the topography. Washington has a strong Native population of First Nations, a close tie with Canada, and a rich tradition of agriculture alongside the worlds greatest tech industries. The possibilities and opportunities are endless!

My personal relationship with Washington State started with a visit to the greater Seattle area when I was still in high school. A good friend, Brad Sacs, invited me for a week to visit and see the spectacular Pacific Northwest. I remember stepping off the plane into what felt like the Jurassic Era. Huge trees towered above and the thick underbrush was packed with berries and strange plant life with giant lush leaves. To an Oklahoma girl from a wind swept grassland, this was the jungle! My other strong memory from that first visit was Snoqualmie Falls. I’d never seen a waterfall that big. It was such a magical visit, I had no idea at the time that one day, that waterfall, the river, the trees, and all that is western Washington, would one day become home.

I would go through several more years of school on The East Coast, and spending all of those summers working in some kind of outdoor educational employment from The Central Park Conservancy in NYC, to The Vermont Wilderness School in Brattleboro Vermont. The passion for learning in an outdoor environment was compelling, for me, and everyone I worked with, wether students or instructors, we were all learning together. I took this phyilosaphy with me to The Pacific Northwest, when I chose to cotinue my education in naturalist training. I’d begun learning about eight shields mentoring from people like Jon Young and the ideas around nature awareness in cultivating an innate sense of self. So many young people were struggling with self identity and connecting in a world now boxing them inside in front of a screen. I wanted to help get people outside and awake, active and engaged, so I sought the best training in the most alternative, fun place I could find. That turned out to be Duvall, WA.

The Wilderness Awareness School’s 9 month Anake program fundamentally changed my understanding of the world through a close connection with nature. I already loved the outdoors, but until then, I had really thought most people just came out into the wilderness for camping, or hiking. It was a thrill to see so many people wanting to actually return to a more natural rhythm in their lives, and to want to explore that through nature based education. Anake offered a sort of rewinding of the heart and soul through connective regeneration of self in the learning journey. I’d spend much of my life outside, starting as a girl on horseback on The Great Plains of Oklahoma, and later in lazy New England Rivers, and the Green Mountains of Vermont, where I learned about Tom Brown’s journey in “The Tracker”, and began learning from a friend who had taken a standard class at The Tracker School.

Primitive skills were a gateway to creating the sense in me of self awareness and sufficiency, which has nurtured in me independence, creativity, and confidence. I saw how valuable this natural learning is, and began a journey to educate others, introducing them to their own inner power through the reflections of the natural world. The story of how nature helps us “find” ourselves has already been written about by many philosophers, scientists, and romantics, so I will stick to my own journey to what brought me to this land and what I am doing now to fulfill my dreams and the dreams of many others.

In spending time learning about survival in the wilderness, I began to better understand why there was a shift in humanity away from traditional hunter gatherer, to civilization and domestication. Security in numbers is real, survival alone is almost impossible in the long term. The basic needs, like shelter, food, and water, are best established and maintained through agricultural practices to sustain urban growth. World population dictates our reliance on engineered systems designed by bright minds. This is why learning is so important, for the future of our evolution as a species, we must continue to reinvent and expand our thinking to solve ever growing challenges faced by such a large and diverse culture.

This is what I am working on with the land. The people have spent a lot of time walking away form the wildness that once held them. This was innovative, but also a sacrifice in so many ways. Where we once turned to nature for sustenance in sacred relationship, we now demanded it on our terms, and we force the land into submission through tilling, seed selection, and mass deforestation for the sake of maintaining an ever increasing population, which is being raised with the notion of entitlement, which the earth can no longer support. Maybe we all need to take a moment to go back and read “The Giving Tree”, because the people have forgotten generosity, and now only take to survive.

In a world of scarcity, there is never enough. In a world of abundance, there is always more than enough. Let’s cultivate abundance! For me, that looks like literally planting seeds in the earth and growing food. This recourse is a basic need, and one that’s a real challenge to find on a wild landscape (trust me). Our ancestors had endless land and ocean to wander, today, what’s left of the wild spaces in the country is either privately held, or too small to support a large number of foragers. So, we have to cultivate land and continue to advance our understanding of how to stay ahead of consumption by making more.

Nature is finite, like us, like everything. The illusion is this belief that the people can keep reaching, and something will be there, and that’s not the truth for MANY people. For those who think it is, please take a moment to ask if you really need to reach, and what you must put back in its place. Truly, for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. (a quick note on this theory, opposite does not mean the negative in all cases, sometimes, it might be referring to a reflection, or maybe even, the vibrational response, a returning wave) But there is a return, and in this capitalist illusion, we call it profit, bur at what actual cost? On the land, when I want food, that literal consumption of one thing to sustain another, I take life, with my own two hands, from the field, forest, water, the land. That’s as real as it gets, and I would like to encourage others to experience this, and understand: when you take, it feels good because a need is met, but someone else has to give for you to take, please give a heck of a lot, because if you are able to sit here and read this, you already have so much.

Giving time is the most valuable place to start; what is eating most of your time? What is that time giving back? In my own life, giving time to being outside was the pivotal connector and inspiration to enact change in my self. This is why encouraging the people to be outside is crucial in forming good relationship with self, and place. I found land that wants to be productive, with the right stewarding, to give what I can from a place that is held with intension, vision, and a lot of love.That place was Washington, because the temperate climate and abundant waters offer abundant recourses and mild climate for thriving life. This makes my intension to grow food seemingly easier to fulfill, though a drought this summer has made that path a little rockier then expected.

The land is also located in a place where people are awake and active on a grassroots scale for me to know personally, and support. There is a Main Street with a coffee shop (more than one) where people gather in the morning to talk and exchange ideas. Our local library is a happening place, and the used bookstore thrives. There are influxes of people arriving in the area, continuing to diversify and expand the population with new energy. New housing at the farm will offer some more affordable places to rent, stretching available resources that have already been developed, leaving other wilder places free of new building. Shelter is another basic need, and world population is going to demand it in the billions. Get ready!

I know that this land can offer great abundance in so much, but food is my other personal quest. Maybe the country’s big agricultural industry is not the best place to invest in the future of our food and health. In working with the wonderful wisdom: “let thy food be thy medicine, and thy medicine be thy food”, I felt that beyond merely connecting people to the land through conscious exploration and questioning, it would also be a service to cultivate connection into the soil its self, and ask in return for sustenance, we will tend, as we have done in union with the earth, since the people began.

In moving forward, places and people are constantly inventing, defining, and shaping the course of our reality through action, which creates reaction. If we are not reacting fast enough… this is where the work comes in, but where to start? The race began when you realized your first conscious thought. Keep thinking, it’s as fresh as your mind, and might make you forever young. More lessons two years of observing in one place had gifted me, time, grace, practice, self, food and medicine I grew and tended with intension, craft, confidence, intension, intension, intension.

Gratitude for the journey and place, may the work continue and the lessons abound! Thank you people, land, water, sky, birds and bees, all the creepy crawly things, all that is seen and unseen, and to the vision which guides us in love and peace,

Liz Crain, owner and steward of Leafhopper Farm

Year One

chop wood, carry water
chop wood, carry water

Officially, this blog will begin on July 31st. This is the landmark date of when the owner took charge of the land and created Leafhopper Farm. Hello, my name is Liz, and I am the current owner and operator of the farm. My vision steers this ship. There are other strong people helping to carve out this place, but they will evolve over time, as all things do. For now, it is me, my dog, and a few other two and four legged beings working this beautiful place for the sake of remembering. What does it take to make a place home? How do you define home? What about community? How are things connected and what does it mean to own land? What do we do with our dreams once reality comes crashing down? We reassess and open new doors of opportunity. We strive to live each day fully, being true to ourselves and this place. Place, a belonging we all long for in this life. Truly, people are nothing without place. (think of the recent Hobbit films) ((or not)) The point is, being connected. Tune in, sit with it, grow. This is the mantra of Leafhopper. We hope you appreciate this little adventure into cultivation of people, place, and being.