One
Day at Killarney Farm
It’s
a warm July day and the 6-acre Killarney Farm feels as idyllic as Brigadoon—
with little sound beyond the birds and bees.
About an hour southeast
of Coeur d’Alene, well-manicured rows ablaze with herbs, flowers,
vegetables, and berries surround two brimming hoop houses, a barn, and
the solar paneled shake-andlog home built by owners Paul Smith and Ellen
Scriven.
Photo by Mark
LaMoreaux. Intern Carla Haegele picks strawberries for market.
It’s Wednesday—hours before
tonight’s Kootenai County Farmers Market.
Awake with the sun, Smith, Scriven,
and two interns—here to help and learn
from these icons of organic gardening—
answer our questions and pose for photos
only if we can keep up with them.
Lean, muscular, tan as the earth, they run
from rows to water barrels and hoses—
cleaning vegetables for this afternoon’s
customers—then back to the harvest.
This is no task for those who expect coffee
breaks.
First love is
selling at farmers markets
“We both love to grow food,” says Scriven. Smith started clearing
this land 28 years ago and 18 years ago they began growing more food than
they could use. They stock a roadside stand and sell to area markets and
restaurants. But their first love is selling directly to customers—
especially at farmers markets.
“There is nothing like it,” says Scriven.
“By 8 a.m. customers are lined up. It’s a
mad rush. Customers are so supportive!
They say, ‘This is the best spinach, the
best broccoli I’ve eaten.’ They tell other
customers. They can’t believe how long
the produce lasts, because it’s so fresh.
The feedback, excitement, enthusiasm is what keeps us going. It’s
not the money.
It’s the satisfaction. ‘We know it’s hard
work’, they tell us. ‘But we are so appreciative
of you guys.’”
Out in a strawberry patch, Carla
Haegele, 25, a University of Victoria graduate,
one of two summer
interns, sweat
streaking her face,
searches for the reddest
berries. She
found this internship
on the http://attra.
ncat.org web site—
Appropriate Technology
Transfer for Rural Areas—a resource-rich
non-profit site dedicated to helping growers
build sustainable agriculture and communities.
During peak season, like today, Haegele
works from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m., helping harvest
as many as 50 different crops, in
exchange for room, board, a stipend, and
insight. “They are great people to learn
from,” she says. “Both Paul and Ellen have
so much knowledge to share. And, oh
yeah…they cook! We eat produce from
this garden every day!”
Idaho’s 11th
farm to be certified organic—in 1991—Killarney’s emphasis
is on building and maintaining soil fertility by incorporating crop residues,
mulch, onfarm composted animal manures, and green (plant) manures. They
practice crop rotation, drip irrigation, hand cultivation, and harvest.
Reciprocal relationship
with CALS
As with many small-acreage growers, their relationship with the UI’s
College of Agricultural and Life Sciences is reciprocal. UI Extension’s
Vickie Parker-Clark in Coeur d’Alene “helped us a lot in the
beginning, through organizing conferences, classes, and workshops,”
says Scriven. They also learned through “wisdom she shared”
from her leadership role on the National Direct Marketing Association
board and from Idaho Master Gardener classes. In turn Scriven has taught
college-sponsored workshops and was a founding member of Rural Roots with
CALS and Washington State University. Also, Killarney Farm is sometimes
open to CALS students on field trips.
“Not everyone can make a small farm
succeed,” adds Parker-Clark. “Killarney
Farm has done it. What we can do is help
people plan, and connect them with tools
to help them succeed.”
--by Mary Ann Reese
©
2004 University of Idaho, College of Agricultural and Life Sciences.
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