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An Old Barn That is Restoring Us

I remember the first week we moved into this Extreme Home Makeover house. Truthfully, my heart was still somewhere in Colorado. I knew coming back to Iowa was the right decision, but I had not fully bought into the vision my husband was so eager to jump into. I was physically here, but emotionally I was still holding on to the what-ifs.

It was right after Christmas when he asked me to bundle up, head outside, and bring the camera. I will be honest, I was not pleasant. I was sarcastic and dismissive, and I gave him a hard time about documenting our journey on YouTube. Deep down, I think I was afraid. Afraid I would have to dust off old skills I learned in college, skills I never really had the chance to use or fully believe in. I was also afraid of what people would think. After all, I had left Iowa to prove I could make it on my own, and here I was, coming back and stepping into something I did not feel qualified to do and did not think I deserved. So I packed that vision away and tucked it next to the box of dreams labeled maybe someday.

I handed him the camera anyway.

Our First Farm Tour

I had no idea that moment would quietly mark the beginning of an entirely new life for us.

As I stood there filming him share his hopes for the property, I remember thinking, how are we ever going to pull this off? Recently, I rewatched that video almost five years later while searching for old footage of the barn we ultimately decided to keep and restore. In that video, we casually said we were going to tear it down.

Life had other plans.

That first summer brought more firsts than we could have imagined. We began to understand how much work the land truly needed. There were moments of regret and defeat, but more often there were moments of progress, pride, and renewed vision. About a year and a half later, we launched The Barn Fund Project.

I remember Ryan asking me to design a T-shirt to help raise money for the restoration. I did. Then winter came and mysterious packages started arriving. I watched my husband slowly assemble a commercial vinyl cutter I did not ask for and was not prepared for. The confidence this man has in me is, at times, overwhelming.

When I asked why he did not talk to me first, he said, “Because I knew you would shoot it down.”

That vinyl cutter sat untouched for a year.

Then another winter came, and something in me shifted. I decided it was time to figure it out. I sat beside that machine in tears more than once, frustrated, angry, convinced my husband had forced this on me. But those feelings did not last long. Because deep down, I knew something else was true. He believed in me because he knew I always figure things out.

And I did.

I am still figuring it out.

Then a hat press showed up. Same conversation. Same doubt. And that summer at the market, I started selling hats for the Barn Fund Project, fully designing them myself. I fell in love with the process. At the same time, we were building greenhouses, opening new growing spaces, launching a farmstand, and doing all of it while working full-time jobs.

Life was stressful.
But it was rewarding.

Just a month and a half ago, Ryan was asked to speak at an event. He asked if I could create 40 shirts using vinyl we already had, cost effective, good quality, and fast. Two years ago, that request would have paralyzed me. This time, my answer was easy.

Absolutely.

I designed it. Cut it. Weeded it. Pressed it. Even tackled a two color design. Then I finally used that puffy vinyl I had been too afraid to touch and ordered trucker hats to match. On event day, I ran the farm table while Ryan presented. I controlled the slides. Played the videos. We moved in sync.

We were a team.

The support we received that day, and the shirts and hats sold, went straight back into the barn fund.

Earlier this year, Ryan asked a hard question. What if we just put up a pole barn instead? Everyone had opinions about what we should do versus what our hearts were telling us.

My answer was immediate.

No.

We made a promise to save her. And yes, I call the barn her, because I see myself in her. Weathered. Overlooked. Full of potential. I told Ryan I did not care if it took our lifetime. We would die trying. We would save, sell merch, and restore her without taking on new debt.

He looked at me and said, “Okay. Let’s get this plan moving.”

It took months to find anyone willing to even look at the barn. Then one day, the call came. God sent. The roof and siding were completed, and not even a day later, Ryan was out there painting her the color that has lived in our hearts for years.

At first, I was upset. Then I understood.

This barn is pulling us forward.

That same day, I went and bought more paint.

Because this barn, without a doubt, is restoring us right alongside her.

Moral of the Story – Fill your life with people who will inspire and motivate you to live outside of your comfort zone. I have realized that most of my success has come from the paths with the most resistance. Don’t forget that. ❤️✌🏼-Jamie

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Untamed

They say that there is someone for everyone in this world. Ryan and I couldn’t be more opposite it seems but I without a doubt know he is my person. I know this because I do not think we would have made it this far in our journey with all the challenges that have been thrown our way. We have seemed to walk through the fire hand and hand overcoming those challenges with no injuries just lessons and growth.

Ryan and I met while attending Kirkwood Community College. We met in 2000. He tells the story a bit different than I do so you are going to get my version. I remember walking through the Linn Hall lobby to attend my class. Ryan seemed to always be in the lobby during my passing. He would say hello to me every time I passed by. He did this for weeks. I was extremely shy and would just keep walking and not speak until… it was finals week just before Christmas break.

I walked by Ryan and he of course spoke. Something in me gave me the courage to say hello back. He had a shocked look on his face and asked me when I was going to take him to lunch. I just smiled and walked away.

Later in that day I saw Ryan, he will tell you I followed him.. and I will admit I was hoping to see him. I worked up all the courage I had and as soon as I saw him I asked him when he was going to take me to lunch. He said now! He told me he left his wallet at home and had to go get it.. What really was going on was that Ryan was a caregiver to a quadriplegic gentleman to help get him through college. He ran into the house and told him he scored a date and asked for a $20 advance. We ended up going to KFC. Ryan had the pricing figured out.. he was praying I wouldn’t get anything more than a tenders meal. It just so happened that is exactly what I got.

Through his eyes

Ryan and I were pretty much inseparable after our lunch date. I didn’t introduce Ryan to my family for a while. If I am being honest I was nervous. Nervous that Ryan would see how I grew up from very humble beginnings and I had a bit of a facade going to hide my past. At that point I had probably 15-20 store credit cards and a majority of them maxed out. I was also a little embarrassed of how I grew up and didn’t want to scare him away. If I am also being honest here.. we didn’t have much diversity in our little town. My family has a splash of diversity due to my mother being Hispanic but I was worried Ryan would be uncomfortable… in actuality it was me that was uncomfortable. I didn’t want to have to be put in a position to defend our love. I knew very early in our relationship that we were two untamed hearts and I was absolutely head over heels in love with him and if I had to make a choice I would choose him.

Ryan met my family a few months into dating and as crazy as he already knew I was he expected the same from my family.. let’s just say we didn’t disappoint and he stuck around. My family welcomed Ryan in with open arms.

Fast forward about a year into our relationship.. I found out I was pregnant. We were just young adults who were just getting to know each other now bringing a life into this world. We welcomed our son into this world and agreed at that time we were going to hold off on marriage and focus on our education and our child. That was exactly what we did. We both worked full time jobs while attending school at night. We both obtained our Bachelor’s degrees in just a few short years. We were determined to be successful not only for us but for our son as well.

About 5 years after our son was born Ryan proposed to me at my grandparents home in front of my family. What I didn’t know was he had taken my father fishing that prior Fall and asked him for my hand in marriage. My father of course told him at that time he better be sure because there was a no return policy. What I have learned over the years is that Ryan is an old soul. He truly is one of a kind.

Here we are 25 years later and stronger than ever. I look back on all the challenges that have been placed in front of us knowing we could have easily gave up but we didn’t. We had so many tables where we pulled up our own chairs… there were times we didn’t even have a table to sit at so we had to bring our own. I always go back to the love we have for each other. Our hearts are untamed and that is 100% our power.

The lessons we have learned along the way was our preparation to our biggest challenge yet. This farm..

Moral of the story…genuine love is wild and untamed that absolutely nothing can stand in its way. You don’t really find out its authenticity in the good times.. it’s the bad times where it tends to show its truest power.

-✌🏼🦁♥️Jamie

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Her Storm, Her Rainbow

2025 has chewed me up and spit me out. And still, here I am, learning how to love this new version of myself. I know I’m different. I am not the same woman I was a year ago, and I don’t think I’m supposed to be. The reality of how short life truly is has taken hold of me in a way I can’t unsee.

I know I have to lead with purpose and intention, but I’ll be honest, it’s hard right now. There are scars on my heart that are still healing, and I’m not entirely sure who this woman is yet. I know exactly who I want to become, I’m just moving through the fog of how to reach her. This storm feels like the storm of my life.

But don’t feel bad for me. Don’t worry about me. I already know this will shape me into a better woman. Some work has to be done alone, and this is mine.

This past year, I took a leap, pouring myself into learning new skills and new ventures, partly to survive and partly to avoid the pain. What I didn’t realize at the time was that I was healing by stretching myself beyond what was comfortable. Growth found me there.

It’s almost surreal how much I relate to the barn project, restoring something weathered and revealing beauty and grace that was always there, just hidden beneath time and storms. When you hear me talk about that old barn, know that I’m also talking about myself.

This is my storm. And I know, without question, that once I make it through, it will also be my rainbow.

Moral of the Story – Dear 2025 you can respectfully kiss my ass. ❤️✌🏼-Jamie

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Her Story

Weathered and stressed, aging in ways she never asked for. Everyone around her sees her true potential, but she struggles to believe she is still worthy, still capable, still carrying so much to give. She remembers the ups and downs, the storms she has survived, the years of being an afterthought.

Then one day everything shifts. She is lifted from the shadows of her comfort zone and carried forward, finally brought to the front of the line to be seen and heard. She is still weathered, still aged, still stressed, but now she knows she has to be strong for what comes next.

She stands there, front and center, with every eye waiting to see her next move. What she does not realize, what she has not realized for years, is that she is not alone this time.

As she brushes the dust of doubt off piece by piece, she starts to understand her true value. Some days those old dusty boards creep back in, trying to remind her she is nothing more than an aging fragment of what she once was.

But they never stay long.
Because she shines a little brighter now.
Because she finally sees her purpose, bigger, bolder, and more beautiful than she ever believed it could be.

Moral of the story – Aged and weathered does not mean you are worth less. It means you carry a strength, a story, and a beauty that only time can create. Your value grows with every storm you have survived. Surround yourself with the ones who can already see that in you, because they will help you rise into the purpose you were always meant for.

❤️✌🏼-Jamie

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Tables

Can you remember a time when you tried to sit at a table that wasn’t meant for you? For me, it started young at family gatherings where the kids had their table, the adults had theirs, and there was no crossing that invisible line.

That theme carried on into adulthood. I often found myself squeezing into spaces where I didn’t quite belong, dragging up my own chair and proving I was “worthy” of elbow room. But here’s the truth: I’m tired of constantly carving out space at someone else’s table.

The shift came in my early twenties, on a road trip with my husband and our 4-year-old son. We had spent the day diamond mining in Arkansas, simple, affordable fun for a little boy obsessed with treasure hunting. On the way home, we stopped at a nearly empty Pizza Hut in Arkansas. The sign said seat yourself, so we did. And then…nothing. No greeting, no service. Just the weight of stares from the staff behind the counter.

My husband leaned in and whispered, “We need to leave. Now.” As we walked out, their eyes followed us. By the time we reached the car, a truckload of men pulled in and tailed us until we got out of town.

That was the moment my world tilted. The moment I realized that while I’d always had the chance to pull up a chair, my husband and my son might never even be offered that opportunity. Not because of who they are, but because of the color of their skin.

That reality still sits heavy. But it also fuels our purpose. We no longer wait for someone else to make space. We build our own tables. And at our tables, no one has to fight for room. There is space, always, for everyone.

Moral of the story… Build a table big enough for everyone and if you are at a table that doesn’t have enough chairs maybe its time to build your own.. ❤️✌🏼- Jamie


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Along the way

I never thought a garden could teach me so much about myself. But here I am—stronger, braver, and more confident than ever, all thanks to the lessons it’s planted in my life.

Not too long ago, I was a timid, insecure woman who would back away at the first sign of resistance. But these days? Oh, no. Not anymore. This garden has transformed me. I’m sowing fierce—yes, that’s sow fierce, and the spelling is absolutely intentional.

Sure, I fail. Often. But every misstep pushes me closer to my goals. I’ve made it my mission to learn everything I can about becoming a successful gardener, a thriving farmer, and, above all, a better human being. And if there’s one thing that I have learned is that our best outcomes have come from the things we were most intentional about.

A couple of seasons ago, we planted a 50-foot row of Orient Express eggplants—a slender, gorgeous variety that thrives like crazy. The plants were prolific, but here’s the catch: our market wasn’t exactly clamoring for eggplants.

So what did we do? We shared them! Our amazing neighbor is an eggplant enthusiast, so we’d drop off bundles of them every chance we got. And when we did sell them, we priced them at $1 each—affordable, but not quite enough to match their incredible growth.

This experience taught us a lot about aligning our crops with what our market actually needs. And it’s a reminder that every season is an opportunity to learn, adjust, and grow—both literally and figuratively.



Even though eggplants were not flying off our market table I found it incredibly important to learn everything I could about them. This would then allow me to promote them a little more confidently! So here is a little about what I have learned so far about how great these vegetables truly are. This is also why I implemented them into my own diet. I even started to juice them with other fruits from my farm.

Nutritional Benefits

  1. Low in Calories and High in Fiber
    • Eggplant is perfect for weight management, providing satiety with minimal calories.
    • Its fiber content supports healthy digestion and helps regulate blood sugar.
  2. Rich in Antioxidants
    • Contains nasunin, a powerful antioxidant found in the purple skin, which protects brain cells and reduces oxidative stress.
    • Packed with other antioxidants like chlorogenic acid, which has anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial properties.
  3. Heart Health
    • Helps reduce bad cholesterol (LDL) levels thanks to its fiber and antioxidants.
    • Supports healthy blood pressure due to its potassium content, which balances sodium levels in the body.
  4. Blood Sugar Control
    • Low in carbohydrates and high in fiber, eggplant slows the absorption of sugar, making it great for managing diabetes.
  5. Bone Health
    • Contains small amounts of calcium, magnesium, and vitamin K, which support strong bones and reduce the risk of osteoporosis.
  6. Brain Health
    • Nasunin not only protects brain cells but also supports better blood flow to the brain, enhancing cognitive function.
  7. Skin and Hair
    • Rich in vitamins A, C, and E, eggplant promotes healthy skin and hair by fighting free radicals and supporting collagen production.
  8. Cancer Prevention Potential
    • Chlorogenic acid may help combat cancer-causing free radicals and protect cells from mutations.

How to Incorporate Eggplant

  • Grill or roast it for a smoky flavor.
  • Add to stews, curries, or pasta dishes.
  • Use as a healthy substitute in lasagna or for making eggplant parmesan.
  • Blend into dips like baba ghanoush for a nutritious snack.

Selling eggplant has been a journey of trial and error, but one full of lessons! Like I had mentioned, a couple of seasons ago, we struggled to move a skinny variety called Orient Express. While the plants produced like champions, the demand just wasn’t there. So, we decided to switch gears and grow a more traditional variety the next season. And guess what? It was a game-changer!

We still didn’t sell out every week, but the improvement was undeniable. More eggplant left the farmstand and market tables, and less came back home. Progress is progress, right?

Last season, we upped the ante again, planting another 50-foot row of eggplant. We even experimented with a beautiful white variety in the greenhouse. Unfortunately, timing wasn’t on our side. By the time the plants started producing, the season was wrapping up. But all wasn’t lost—we freeze-dried the leftover eggplant to enjoy later, turning what could have been a total miss into an exciting win.

This experience taught us that gardening is all about adaptability. Each season, we try, we tweak, and we grow—literally and figuratively. Who knew eggplant could teach us so much about resilience and flexibility?

What’s your favorite lesson from the garden? Share it with us below—we love hearing your stories! 🌱🍆

If you are thinking about growing eggplants here are a few ideas to help you with growing:

1. Choose the Right Variety

  • Select varieties suited to your growing region.
    • Popular options: Black BeautyFairy Tale (compact and great for containers), or Ping Tung Long (prolific and heat-tolerant).

2. Plant at the Right Time

  • Warm Weather Lovers: Eggplants thrive in temperatures of 70–85°F during the day and no lower than 50°F at night.
  • Start seeds indoors 8–10 weeks before your last frost date or purchase young transplants.
  • Wait to plant outdoors until soil temperatures are at least 60°F.

3. Provide the Perfect Spot

  • Full Sun: Eggplants need 6–8 hours of direct sunlight daily.
  • Well-Draining Soil: Amend soil with compost or organic matter to improve drainage and fertility. Aim for a pH of 5.5–7.0.

4. Space and Support

  • Spacing: Allow 18–24 inches between plants and 24–36 inches between rows.
  • Staking: Provide stakes or cages to support the plants as they grow, preventing heavy fruits from bending or breaking stems.

5. Feed and Water Wisely

  • Fertilizer: Use a balanced fertilizer (5-10-5) when planting, then switch to one higher in phosphorus and potassium once the plant sets fruit.
  • Watering: Keep the soil consistently moist but not waterlogged. Deep watering 1–2 times per week is ideal.
  • Mulch: Add a layer of mulch to retain soil moisture and suppress weeds.

6. Watch Out for Pests and Diseases

  • Common Pests:
    • Flea Beetles: Use row covers or neem oil to deter these tiny pests that chew holes in leaves.
    • Aphids and Spider Mites: Spray with insecticidal soap or a strong jet of water.
  • Diseases: Practice crop rotation and avoid overhead watering to reduce fungal issues like blight.

7. Harvest at the Right Time

  • Pick when fruits are glossy, firm, and slightly smaller than full size (overripe eggplants become bitter).
  • Use pruning shears or a sharp knife to cut the fruit, leaving a short stem attached.

8. Bonus Tips for High Yields

  • Warm the Soil: Use black plastic mulch to raise soil temperatures early in the season.
  • Pollination: Eggplants are self-pollinating, but gently shaking the flowers can improve fruit set.
  • Companion Planting: Grow near marigolds or basil to deter pests and attract pollinators.
  • Dill or Cilantro are another great option to help combat the potato beetle. Last season we had a bout of potato beetles causing some issues with our eggplants. Having a companion crop would have been helpful. This would have also been another option to use as an additional cash crop!

Here’s a piece of advice.. don’t over do it in the eggplant space just yet. If you don’t know your market I would lean on a smaller planting. I don’t necessarily think that eggplant will be your money maker but it does add color and variety to your table! It should also land on your customers dinner table weekly and it most likely would if they only knew the benefits of these vegetables.

Moral of the story: Take the time to truly learn about the dreams you’re chasing. Whatever it is you’re diving into, understanding the basics will save you so much time, energy, and frustration in the long run.

Trust me, I’ve been there—scrambling in the thick of the growing season, trying to figure out my next move when time was slipping through my fingers. It’s overwhelming, but it taught me something invaluable: Preparation isn’t just a step; it’s the foundation of success.

So, invest in yourself. Read, plan, ask questions, and set yourself up to thrive—not just survive. Because when the season comes, and everything starts to bloom, you’ll be ready to grow right alongside it. 🌱

Stay prepared, stay inspired. You’ve got this. ❤️✌🏼 – Jamie

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Motivational Vomit

I’ve had the privilege to work on a project at my job that allows me to connect with nearly every leader in my division. Many would see this as a golden opportunity to build a standout resume—and it truly is—but here’s the thing: I’m not in the market for building resumes anymore. My focus has shifted.

Because of this, I bring a very different perspective to the project and what motivates me. This work isn’t just about pushing myself out of my comfort zone—it’s about growing through discomfort and helping others do the same. At times, I’ve found myself teetering on the edge of negativity, tempted to sit alongside those who struggle to adapt to change. But every time I feel that pull, something reminds me of the bigger picture. That reminder sparks a light in me, and I’ve seen it shine onto others, lifting them when they need it most.

Through this experience, I’ve learned something profound: every single person I interact with is carrying something heavy. Life doesn’t pause for work or projects. Knowing this gives me an incredible opportunity—to turn what might be a terrible day for someone into a halfway decent one, simply by being a positive force.

I won’t pretend it’s always easy. Like everyone else in this project, I’ve received feedback—sometimes colorful feedback. One person even told me my conversations can come off as “motivational vomit.” I couldn’t help but laugh, because I get it. But here’s the thing: I haven’t stopped. Why? Because over time, those same people begin to realize that my words, my energy, come from a genuine place. Consistency builds trust, and trust creates change.

Now, let me share why this matters so much to me.

Just over a year ago, I hit one of the darkest points in my life. I felt like I didn’t care if I walked this planet or not. I was drowning in depression and didn’t even realize it. My husband bore the brunt of my pain, becoming my emotional punching bag as I spiraled. We were on the brink of separation. I felt like a complete failure, even though I painted a perfect picture for the outside world. My husband was the only one who knew I was waging an invisible war inside.

But he didn’t give up on me. He pulled me out of that darkness. It took months—months of hard, uncomfortable self-reflection, therapy, and finding ways to heal. I had to rebuild myself with intent. I started reading, seeking professional help, and digging deep into my past. Along the way, I began this blog—a space to confront wounds I had ignored for far too long.

That’s why I pour every ounce of positivity into others. I know what it’s like to feel invisible, to fight a silent battle. But I also know how much of a difference a kind word, a moment of understanding, or even just a spark of hope can make. Some days, this work leaves me completely drained. It’s a constant fight to keep my own negative thoughts at bay. But I’ve found peace in learning new skills, diving into creative outlets, and focusing on personal growth. To others, it might look like I’m scattered, but these things ground me and keep the darkness in check.

Moral of the story: You never know what someone else is battling beneath the surface. Unless they tell you, you may never see the signs. And you might not recognize those signs unless you’ve walked a similar path. So, be the light and the encouragement others need, whether or not anyone is watching. Your kindness, your positivity—it can change lives in ways you may never fully realize.

❤️✌🏼 Jamie


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🌱 Rediscovering Myself: A Journey of Growth and Positivity 🌱

The past year and a half has been a transformative chapter in my life—a time dedicated to rediscovering me. Somewhere along the way, I lost sight of who I truly was, but I’m finally finding my way back.

It hasn’t been easy. I had to make tough choices about the people and energy I allowed into my life. Outside pressures—those unspoken (or spoken) expectations we all feel—were weighing me down. I was torn between who I used to be and the evolving version of myself, while still surrounded by people who thought they knew me better than I knew myself.

What I discovered wasn’t easy to swallow: some of those closest to me, while not intentionally harmful, were casting shadows on my growth. Their negativity and doubt crept in, suffocating the joy and newness I was trying to embrace. These were people I once admired, whose opinions deeply influenced my choices. But as I leaned into my personal growth, I realized they no longer served the life I was building.

So, I made a choice. I chose me.

Focusing on myself came with its own challenges. When I shared my small wins, I was often met with silence from those I expected to cheer me on. Instead, strangers—people I never imagined—became my greatest supporters, standing in ovation while what I thought was my long-time “support system” whispered about how I’d changed. Funny how life works, isn’t it?

Today, my circle is small but intentional. The light I allow into my life is positive, and the moment I sense negativity, I walk away without hesitation. I’ve built a new cheering section, one that lifts me up, and I’m running toward it unapologetically.

Do I still struggle? Of course. Imposter syndrome creeps in sometimes—questions like, What if they’re right? What if this is just a phase? But then I’m reminded of the purpose behind what we’re building here on the farm and having my bestfriend right beside me sharing the same visions. This isn’t a fleeting moment; it’s a life we’ve chosen with intention. And the reminders come in countless ways—big and small.

I’ve learned to listen to those reminders and embrace an unapologetic approach to my life and choices. I finally know what I need to be happy, and I refuse to compromise on that.

Moral of the story…If you’re on a similar journey, know this: it’s okay to choose yourself. It’s okay to walk away from the old and embrace the new. You deserve a life that makes you feel alive.
 ❤️✌🏼 Jamie

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The Motivated Spouse

My husband is my soulmate, my best friend, and my safe space. A few years ago, I added “business partner” to that list. Everything seemed to change when our son moved out and we moved back home to Iowa.

Looking back, I realize we were just trying to figure out who we were again. We were two young people in love who started a family early. At that time, we didn’t have much in common with our friends, who were out living their best lives, while we worked multiple jobs to take care of our newly formed family.

One thing that’s always been true is that my husband is a dreamer and a go-getter. What I didn’t fully realize until we returned to Iowa was how deeply he wanted me to be part of his success. Let me explain.

Over the years, my husband had many side hustles (I’ve talked more about this in a prior blog). These ventures soaked up a lot of his free time, while I focused on climbing the corporate ladder, which often required an exhausting amount of travel. During that time, he quite literally ran our household and raised our son. For that, I will forever be grateful. Our son is an incredible human being, and my husband played a major role in shaping him into who he is today.

This farm didn’t come about much differently than one of my husband’s usual side hustle pitches—except this time, he brought a level of conviction I hadn’t seen before. I had no choice but to run with it. And here I am, five years later, writing about how this farm has changed my life. This was no side hustle; it was a mission.

My husband continues to push me outside my comfort zones. He believes so strongly in my abilities that he quite literally wills me into making things happen. When we first met in college, I was a Graphic Design major. Back then, he was my biggest cheerleader, hyping me up and even lining up people for me to create album covers for. I didn’t see what he saw in me back then—but I do now.

Fast forward 20 years, and he’s still at it. He recently bought a commercial vinyl cutter and told me to figure it out. That machine almost broke me, but I eventually found a love for creating hats, which helped us make our money back. I still have much to learn, but I’ve mastered the basics.

A customer sporting a MAF hat I made!

Just when I thought I’d earned a break, he came home with another marketplace purchase: a used laser engraver. At first, I was furious. I had begged him to let me master the vinyl cutter before diving into anything else, but, of course, he had other plans.

It took me days to set up the engraver—not to mention troubleshooting loose wires and other issues. Eventually, I figured it out, just as he knew I would. Though I’m still a bit annoyed about the outdated machine, it has opened my eyes to what I’m capable of. And yes, I’ve already told him that we’ll be upgrading to a newer model soon so I can really put it to good use.

Enough about me—let’s talk about the amazing man who inspires me every day and what he’s been up to.

About a month and a half ago, I noticed my husband revisiting an old passion from before I started chasing corporate dreams. Years ago, he served on the board of a museum in Waterloo. He was deeply invested in advocating for the east side of town, where we bought our first home. He worked tirelessly to make it a safe, thriving community for our son, but those ambitions were put on hold when my career took us to the Chicagoland area.

This year, something reignited his passion for that museum. He began researching its current state and brainstorming ways to make an impact. Before I knew it, I was helping him design a website, create ads, and revive its social media presence. Together, we got it done, and we continue to make updates as needed.

Since then, he’s reconnected with old contacts and forged new ones. His passion for saving this museum is unparalleled. He’s discovered that the museum faces significant challenges, including debt that risks the loss of the land previous board members worked so hard to secure. Despite the uphill battle—and a history of setbacks tied to the museum’s past—he’s fully committed to turning things around.

He launched the “Save the African American Historical and Cultural Museum” campaign, got the board back together for regular meetings, and was nominated president. When vandalism damaged parts of the museum, he rallied the board to begin repairs, which are now underway. He’s spent countless hours researching artifacts, consulting with other local museums, and making connections. His determination is awe-inspiring, and it has consumed much of his time—so I’ve taken on more responsibilities at the farm to support him in any way I can.

When my husband dreams, I know it’s time to grab our capes and dust them off—because when he’s all in, so am I.

Moral of the story: Be so undeniably motivated that your glow inspires others. You never know when it might spark their fire. ❤️✌🏼 Jamie

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Picture Perfect

I have always been the kind of person who never quite fit in. It’s been that way for as long as I can remember. Don’t feel bad for me, though—this has quite literally shaped my success as an adult. While I had an extremely challenging childhood, I credit those difficulties with contributing to my growth and success as well.

Even now, I still don’t fully fit in, and I’ve become increasingly aware of this as I grow into the “I don’t give a damn” phase of my life. I’ve decided to focus on doing what makes me happy and to inspire that same excitement in others who enter my space.

Recently, I was assigned to a new project at work that has the potential to drain me completely and constantly challenges my work-life balance. Despite this, I do my best to maintain equilibrium because I’m a people person. I care far more about people than processes. I’m a motivator, capable of turning a piece of coal into a diamond. And I don’t believe in gatekeeping ideas.

Sharing my ideas, however, has often been met with adversity. But instead of erasing when others color outside the lines, I ask if I can borrow a crayon and color alongside them. Afterward, I frame that artwork to share it with the world—even if people call it ugly. Here’s the thing I’ve learned: the ugliest things often have the most beautiful stories. So, I keep framing them, hanging them up, and telling those stories for the world to see.

So, what does this have to do with owning a farm? Everything.

The old Jamie would have stayed quiet, taken those same pictures, and stuffed them in a drawer somewhere, never to be seen again. But this farm has become my bigger picture. It’s my canvas, my story, and my proof that I’ve evolved. I no longer feel the need to prove anything to anyone because my motivators have shifted. My intentions for people are genuine—I’m no longer trying to be someone I’m not or impress others for the wrong reasons.

Owning this farm has given me the freedom to become the best version of myself. It’s not about perfection; it’s about living authentically and building a life filled with purpose, passion, and connection.

Moral of the story: If you’re facing adversity, it usually means you’re on the right track. Keep challenging the norm and hanging up those pictures.

♥️✌🏼

– Jamie

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Shift

It’s been a minute since my last blog post, and wow, life got hectic—too hectic. My work-life balance took a nosedive, and honestly, it’s still a bit shaky. But lately, something’s shifting in my perspective, like a light finally breaking through the chaos that’s been at war in my mind.

I’m realizing that the noise drowning out my thoughts is coming from the countless hours I pour into a career that no longer brings me meaning. I’m ending each day mentally exhausted, too drained to focus on what I truly love. I’ve spent so much energy motivating and inspiring others that I’ve been left running on empty. And, let’s be real—how defeating is that?

But here’s the thing: I’m ready to fight for a change. I want to simplify, to find ways to quiet that noise and rediscover the passion that I once had.

I’ve been saying to my husband over and over, “I just want to cash it all in and bet on myself.” Sounds crazy, right?! And, as always, he says, “I’ll support whatever you decide.” But the reality is—it’s not quite the right time. Still, I can’t help but wonder: are there other women out there, right around my age, feeling this same tug-of-war?

Are we really meant to work ourselves to the bone until we hit our mid-60s, and then, finally, try to enjoy what’s left of life? I mean, how many of us are pouring everything into our careers—hitting mental exhaustion, stress levels through the roof, forgetting things as soon as we’re told? Are we sacrificing the now for some distant “someday”?

Winter is tough for me. The slower pace, the stillness—it all means I’m moving around less, with way too much time to stew over things that don’t add value to my life. Somehow, the season seems to amplify all the thoughts I’d rather not dwell on.

I’m leaning into this shift more and more. Instead of giving until there’s nothing left, I’m saving some of that energy for myself. I’ve started upskilling, diving into new things that will add value to the farm and strengthen me personally. Plus, my husband’s recent passion project—totally unrelated to the farm—has me dusting off my design skills, bringing a little of the “old me” back. It’s been refreshing to feel that spark again.

I’ve come to realize that my mental health is worth so much more than any rung on the corporate ladder. The higher I climb, the clearer that truth becomes.

Moral of the story… The best thing you can do is lean into the shift. You will often find that happiness has been waiting for you. ♥️✌🏼 Jamie

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Girl On Fire

Your girl is on fire but she is starting to get a little burnt…My body is telling me to slow down. My mind is in autopilot and I am forgetting things that I should be remembering. Waking up at 4AM and going to bed at midnight is catching up to me.

The stress of our imperfect garden is weighing heavy on me along side a new project assigned to me at work. Trying to figure out how exactly I am going to hang on to this roller coaster ride without falling off. Doing all of this while trying to be a supportive wife, mother, aunt, sister, daughter, colleague, leader and friend. I have been burned out before but never felt like I didn’t have control like this time.

So… how did I get here!? I continue to say yes of course I can or sure no problem. Can you relate? What I should be saying is no that’s not the direction I want to go in. Or appreciate you asking but I will have to respectfully decline. I have come to the realization that I am trying to be everything to everyone but me.

Why is it that we put ourselves last? In order to help others you need to help yourself first.

Burnout has caused my patience to wear very thin. Unfortunately, my husband becomes my emotional punching bag. I can also see that he is starting to fade a bit from burnout. Living this lifestyle is not easy and building a farm is one of the hardest things I have ever done. You never get a break. There is always something that needs to be done and if you don’t do it, it plain and simple won’t get done. You can’t put it off until tomorrow because something’s life may depend on it. Sound dramatic?? It’s not.. as I am writing this at 9PM on a Friday after my husband and I had a spat about absolutely nothing… it was so trivial.. I told him I could plant the rest of the cabbage and he insisted he do it. Thinking about it now, it was an unnecessary conversation. I am also mustering up the strength to put the chickens and ducks up so they are safe from predators during the evening hours.

I also just worked a full day and then rushed out the door to sell at a market 25 minutes away that had a very minimal community turnout. As I was driving home I was thinking about all the time spent harvesting at 6AM only to have to bring a majority of it back home. This happens sometimes especially when it gets closer to school starting again. People get busy. I had to remind myself what matters are when people do show up you are there when they need you. I also enjoy going to market to see and interact with everyone. The world just feels a little lighter and more manageable to carry after a market.

So what now? Well it’s time to take care of me and follow through on my commitments to my already spoken yeses. This means certain things I currently do will be paused not ended so I can gather myself again and rebuild the best version of me. This blog happens to be a pause. I had a great streak going! I posted every week since December 2023. I will be back with a newer version of me.

Moral of the story… It’s time to put yourself first and if you don’t really know if you can find yourself these days… it’s time to go find her (or him).♥️✌🏼-Jamie

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Boxes

I have never been one to do well in confined spaces. I have also been the individual that stands out and not necessarily for all the great reasons.

I have learned to speak up when things are not right or when I have something valuable to add to the conversation. I have also learned to not say anything if it’s just because I want to be heard. I am also the person who will start the conversation with a stranger when all the while it took every ounce of courage to speak.

I tend to take this same approach with our farm adventures. I don’t stick within the confines of a box. My husband Ryan and I are partners in crime. But… not going to lie here.. sometimes I go rogue. I will give you an example. Our market garden has had some challenges this season and not having certain vegetables on our table or in our CSA shares drives me bonkers. We work so unbelievably hard to have a successful year and we are jumping hurdles left and right. Well.. I went rogue and planted extra zucchini plants in a completely different area of the property thinking Ryan will never know… well.. later he bounced the idea of planting melons, pumpkins and sunflowers in that very area.. I didn’t have the heart to tell him I went rogue so just went with it.

Well fast forward 55 days later we have zucchini and watermelon just growing away all while the other zucchini plot is starting to come back strong. Ryan comes up to me and says man that watermelon plant looks like a zucchini plant.. I said yeah… yeah it does. He put his hand up in the air motioning for a high-five because we had zucchini for our CSA members due to me going rogue. Sometimes my crazy works out especially when I have someone who understands it.

It’s those boxes that trip me up though. I do however realize I need some curbs otherwise my chaos starts to overflow and I run out of cups to fill. I have also found the more stress I have the less control I have over my urges to control my not so thought out ideas.

This farm we are building is completely outside of the box. We were not given instructions by generations before us. We are the first generation..,it is just us navigating through what works and some of our ideas are downright unheard of but it works for us. The mountain of unfinished projects are constantly on replay in my mind along with the what ifs. We are not your typical farm or your typical farmers. I think sometimes that is our downfall but most times I think that is our greatest asset because we don’t get stuck in those boxes.

This is another reason we decided to bring freeze dried candy to our farm table. We kept noticing the lack of young people at our markets and needed something on our table that would get the discussion going with kids coming to our table and maybe just maybe they will start asking about us and our farm and who knows maybe even grab a vegetable off the table♥️.

I recently had an experience at a market that gave me an ah-ha moment. We have a couple of markets right after work hours and Ryan and I have discovered that dividing and conquering allows us to be two places at once. As I pulled up to our market I see a young man waiting for me to get setup, he loves the freeze dried candy! So.. I struck him a deal.. I told him if he helped me setup I would pay him in freeze dried candy. He of course took the deal. He gave me full effort and we talked about school and what he has been up to all summer. He completed his task and picked his candy out. I then heard him call his mother to tell her how he earned a bag of freeze dried candy. He later made his way back to the table and bought cucumbers. I realized that I needed to have an open seat at our farm table that everyone can sit comfortably in and encourage outside the box thinking of all ages.

Moral of the story… Be different.. think different..Have the courage to speak up when necessary and listen in those moments when others are meant to shine. ♥️✌🏼-Jamie

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The Content Creator

I am far from giving myself the title of content creator.. Would I like to one day build a side hustle from it? Possibly..

My husband started our YouTube channel when we lived in Colorado. He actually was into the homesteading scene before its popularity took off.

It wasn’t until we moved back to Iowa when I actually got involved with it. I will say I got way too involved in the whole getting subscribers and likes. The YouTube goal of being monetized took over everything in my life. Ryan would constantly remind me that we are a farm who happens to have a YouTube channel and we were not going to fall in that trap of being a YouTube channel who happens to have a farm.

I got too wrapped up into it. Ryan finally said enough is enough and we stepped all the way back from YouTube. I agreed it just wasn’t adding value. I then started to invest more time in Facebook and Instagram but that soon started to become the same thing except I had to work twice as hard to be seen for whatever reason.. I was also revamping our TikTok at the time.

This is a great example on minimal return on full effort. 4 people liked this post of those 4 people I was one of them.. I didn’t sell any basil at the market either.

What I realized was that TikTok loved us way more than Instagram or Facebook. So much time invested in all of these platforms all while working on building our dream here at the farm. I found it and still find it very difficult to do both and give all my efforts while working my full time career to pay the bills.

I pretty much can do a short video in a matter of minutes or put together a post in under 5 minutes. The eye opening ah-ha moment came when I realized I am putting all this effort in posts that do not get seen much or after the fact. It also takes time away from my efforts here getting the farm ready. So.. I have stepped back a lot, I decided to focus on this very blog and our website but… I am not going to post about it like I did every Monday. If you are reading this it is because you either stumbled upon us by accident, searched us out♥️, or happened to see one of my many old blog posts. Either way thank you from the bottom of my heart for giving me a brief moment of your time. I have finally realized that I need to work on understanding how to become better at one thing at a time versus trying to be everything all at once. I have kind of approached life this way up until now and it is unbelievably stressful.

No shade to the folks who post everyday I just find myself getting wrapped up in how many views and likes we got versus building my knowledge on how to make a strong foundation that will last on this farm. I would also get caught up in the algorithm on all platforms and before you know it 20 minutes of my life passed right on by that I can’t get back.

So yes back to the basics for me figuring out how we can be the greatest versions of ourselves so one day we have the valuable content to share that gets the opportunity to be seen. Until that point you will see me gracefully bowing out.

Moral of the story… Note to self.. Jamie put your phone down, be engaged in the conversation, ignore the notification, go find the best version of you. ♥️✌🏼- Jamie

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Extreme Regret

We bought a house that was built in five days… We had looked at so many small acreages and had a few deals fall through. We quite frankly were at our breaking point. We had seen the listing for the home we currently live in but we (meaning my husband) were not interested. It was too big, more money than we wanted to spend, and a little further away than we wanted to be. This listing landed back on our radar as our last deal fell through. We had no idea at the time this house was an Extreme Home Makeover build until the day we went to look at it.

I remember walking into the home and immediately falling in love with the winding staircase. I also fell in love with the greenhouse. I had no idea how to garden or grow in a greenhouse I just loved the idea of it.

Ryan, my husband wasn’t fully bought in. He is the more logical one out of us. I am the dreamer and often the unrealistic thinker. At this point we were house drunk and were just done. Ryan also knew that we left a house in Colorado that I loved. He wanted me to be happy in Iowa. He reluctantly agreed and we placed an offer that day, it was accepted the next day.

I am starting to understand that saying hindsight is 20/20. What I have realized is that I was so worried about not having the big house, nice car, great clothes that I was missing out on what life really has to offer.

Having the big house just means you have more to take care of and clean. It also means the 30+ windows that need replacing cost essentially the price of a small home in a neighboring community. Or the roof that needs replaced is equivalent in cost to two acres of land to purchase.

Perspective is everything. I often get asked if we knew then what we know now would we buy this home. If I am being honest here.. it depends on the day. There are times especially this season which has been a challenging one with all of this rain and our garden flooding three times, our well flooding for the first time and stopped working along with not being able to open windows in the house because they have absolutely no screens which has forced us to buy a few windows at a time to install. The house has its quirks. The thing about this home is it’s all show and not very practical. Not really much storage space. This has caused us to really look at what we really need. I keep telling my husband we need to have an Extreme Garage Sale.. it’s wearing on him so maybe in the distant future a post will land on your socials about Mad Acre Farms selling everything to go simple..

What I love about this property is what it has taught me and continues to teach me the much needed life lessons. Even on the hardest of days I get to be here living our dream of building a sustainable farm.

I think I forget that sometimes, especially when things don’t necessarily go our way. It is actually quite ironic that I am saying this but it has also taught me that I do not need the big fancy things to be happy. If I could change the size of this home I would in a heartbeat. I would make it less than 1500 square feet which would be a reduction of over half the size. I would utilize the additional outside space for pollinator gardens or additional garden plots. I would also take all the money we would be saving in electrical cost and pump that right into the farm.

So do I have regrets? Sure I do! My biggest regret is not having this thought process sooner in life. I don’t need fancy things to be happy. Matter of fact it’s the fancy things that cause the complications in my life. We are here to stay, even though somedays I tell my husband let’s sell it all, cash in our 401ks, find a piece of land out in the middle of nowhere and put up a tiny house and live our dream.

Moral of the story…Fancy isn’t better, it’s just the shiny flashy wrapper containing very likely the same things the simple wrapper had in it. You may have just paid more for it.-✌🏼Jamie

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The Farmhands Tale..

Six… is the number of alarms I have set in the morning. I get up every weekday morning by 4:30 but my goal is 3… let’s just say that is why I have six alarms.

The morning hours are my time. Time that allows me to reset my mental space and charge my inner “You Got This” button. I am being pretty vulnerable here but I often times struggle with my mental health especially when I get stressed or start to feel over overwhelmed. You know that saying check on your strong friends.,, It’s true.. I tend to put way too much on myself doing for everyone else and do not leave much for myself. It has gotten better for me since this farm came into my life. Definitely a beautiful distraction and gives me the courage to say no. What do I mean by that? I am a yes person… I will say yes even when I know it means I don’t have time but I squeeze it in often chipping away from the very little time I had dedicated for myself. The stress this puts on me is insane. The farm has given me the courage to say no without feeling guilty.

My role here at the farm essentially is a full time farmhand. I work two jobs and by far my favorite is my farm job. I never really signed up for this gig it just kind of happened. I remember telling my husband that I didn’t want a major part in the decisions that go on with the farm, I am a leader in my corporate career and make decisions all day long.. I need an escape after hours.

So.. what does a farmhand role look like here? I am basically the go getter or the plan do’er. Do you know how unbelievably hard it is to take instructions from your spouse and then… be able to take feedback without throat punching them!?

My husband is fantastic at compartmentalizing his feelings. We could of just had a random blow up argument 5 minutes ago and then he can walk up to me whistling the tune of Don’t Worry Be Happy and ask me where his new expensive garden tool is that I can’t use because I break all of his cool tools.., I will admit sometimes, ok.. most times my inner child comes out and I will flip him the bird as I go grab his precious tool that he thinks he hid from me.

In the summer time when we are not working our day jobs we are outside working on the farm. My husband is the type of person who has a list for everything. I will often get texts at random times of the day with things we need to get done and I am the reminder button. Every morning after chores are taken care of I start the list. The thing that I have realized is that the list continues to grow before I can cross off the previous task. I also realized that my husband changes his mind frequently and is a bigger dreamer than I ever really knew. This guy right here has a plan to conquer the world and then after he is done doing that he will jump right on to making a list of what’s next to text to me.

This farmhand gig is the hardest job I have ever had mentally and physically but it is one of my favorites hands down. So if you ask me what I do here at the farm I will say a little bit of everything because I am the farmhand and pretty darn good at it too if you ask me!

Moral of the story.. Find a job you would be willing to do for free. Then figure out a plan on how to make that your career. ♥️✌🏼- Jamie

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Side Hustle

I can’t honestly remember a time since my husband and I have been together where he didn’t start a little side hustle.

Shortly after we first met he had started his record label Squadron Records ( he is totally going to get me for that one). He started that side hustle in college. I also remember I was there helping him design his first CD cover. He would get me side gigs designing other aspiring artists CD covers. At that time I was deep into the graphic design scene.

That however, soon went to the back burner because we needed to focus on our little family we started. We ended picking up multiple jobs and switched our schooling to nights. We just didn’t have any time to keep that dream of his going.

A few years after our son was born my husband started a vending company. This one he had started with our 5 year old son. They had candy vending machines across the Cedar Valley. He would take our son with him to fill the machines. This hustle fizzled out after time was stretching a little thin and profits just were not there. I at this point was not fully involved. Our son had taken on the partner role into the family side hustle business.

Then there was one of my favorite side hustles my husband and son started by accident.. I remember coming home one Saturday afternoon from work to our house in Waterloo to see a line of kids outside of our house and my son and husband grinning from ear to ear. My husband had purchased a little cheap single serving snow cone maker with some simple syrup and our son setup a little table outside the house selling snow cones. These two even came up with a special add on called “Pucker Power”, it definitely fit its name and I got a chuckle hearing kids ask for it as a snow cone topper! This was the start of something pretty special. My husband and son decided to take this show on the road and created Arctic Snow. This was a family business and was something we did together as our son grew up. We had it going for a few years up until I accepted a job in Chicago. We had a mobile trailer that was one of Ryan’s first DIY projects. Man… I wish I knew then what I know now.. We sold everything so we could start this new adventure for my career.

Now that I am looking back I realize that the side hustles stopped when we left home. Iowa was the spark. I just never realized it until recent.

Now we are back home and down to what I see as our last and final side hustle. This time we are in it together with equal passion. The question is can we turn this side hustle into something full time?

The side hustle I am referring to is Mad Acre Farms. This hustle hits a little different. We are putting everything we have into this to make something out of it. You could say we are obsessed. What I also find pretty ironic is that we are likely going to implement vending machines in to allow people to feed the animals here at the farm. We have also tossed around the idea of a podcast in the future. Now this isn’t no Squadron Records but it is a close as we may get! We have also discussed bringing back Arctic Snow to the property. Funny how things come full circle isn’t it!?

Our life’s journey has lead us to where we are at today. Each adventure had a purpose in our life that would later resurface with the greatest potential.

Moral of the story… Don’t be afraid to dream big because of the fear of failing. You will never know what your journey has in store for you if you don’t take the risk. ♥️✌🏼 -Jamie

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24/7

My husband Ryan and I met in college and have been together since 2000. We were pretty much kids when we started our little family. There was a time where Ryan and I rotated shifts so we could take care of our son while working full time jobs to put food on the table. We also took turns on completing our bachelors degrees. We barely saw each other. This carried on as our careers progressed except I was the one on the road away from home a majority of the time.

Fast forward to what seemed like a few short years, our son grew up and graduated high school and much like most kids he was ready to leave the nest. This was right in the middle of the pandemic. Everyone’s world was changing, I felt overwhelmed with my own turn of events and quite literally I felt like a fish out of water. My job that once had me traveling weekly was now turned virtual, our son was turning into an adult and I now had to live with the realization of my regretables. Not even sure if that is a word but once you get to know me you will soon realize you will need a Jamie dictionary.. On top of all of this, my very supportive husband was at a point where I needed to step up and show him the support he needed to pursue his passion very much like he did mine for the last twenty years.

It was unbelievably scary to just let go. I realized at that time when my husband came to me for the last and final time about moving back home and buying a farm if I said no he was doing it without me. That was a pivotal decision in my life… the ol’ fork in the road if you will. Do I choose love and family over my career goals of reaching the top?

It was actually an easy decision for me, I have no idea why.. Except it finally dawned on me that I spent a good portion of my life trying to prove my worth in my career while the people who valued me the most took a backseat to my time.

I had no idea the impacts of that single decision of saying yes to the move would make on my life. I also didn’t think about the fact that my job was now virtual and… our son was taking the infamous leap of adulthood and living on his own.. this left Ryan and I in a very different space of learning life again with just us. Our life from 2020 to now has changed.. we were once maybe the couple who spent weekends together now turned into 24/7.

I will admit it was nice to not have to travel, wait in airports, or stay in hotels wishing I were home. However, this newfound time together was a bit of an adjustment. What you may not know is that not only are we partners in crime with our farm ventures we also work for the same organization for our careers as virtual employees. We are together 24/7.. At first it was a bit of a challenge to not let the littlest things get to us but the farm gave us something to really focus on, it saved us on our worst days.

We found a common interest in this farm and it was a beautiful distraction. The farm made our relationship stronger. Now.. don’t get me wrong we fight but now it’s about where and what we are planting or having a knock down drug out fight about seed spacing.. true story. The difference is those spats don’t last long and end up with one of us saying something to make the other person laugh and then we find a common ground and figure it out.

Ryan is my best friend, my ride or die. He drives me insane sometimes but he knows me better than I know myself.

Moral of the story.. Stop trying to prove your worth in a world that will likely replace you the same day. Invest your time with the people who already know your worth. -✌🏼Jamie

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The Farmers Market

You can learn a lot from a farmer’s market… and I mean a lot.

We are starting our fourth season of market this year. We still have so much to learn but have picked up a few things along the way I would like to share with you.

You can meet some pretty amazing people from the community along with some pretty exceptional vendors at these farmers markets. Going into our first season we didn’t know what to expect truly. Full transparency I wasn’t all that into it. I did it for Ryan. I will say though, after a few markets and seeing the involvement with the community and seeing the knowledge and passion the vendors had I quickly became hooked! It amazed me the passion that each vendor had in their skill. I suddenly wanted to know what that felt like. I was so engulfed in my career I didn’t realize that I never really had something of my own that I was passionate about and I needed to change that.

I also noticed that some vendors come and go at the markets we attend but what I realized pretty quickly was that the markets all have the regulars. The regulars are the vendors we refer to as the OGs (Original Gangsters) these are the folks that show up year after year rain or shine. When they talk you listen, take notes and ask questions. Trust me they are dropping gold nuggets!

These folks also are the ones who if they are veggie farmers will have crop a lot sooner than most. Trust me when I tell you this.. whatever you are thinking about trying they have already did it. They already figured it out and they are a wealth of knowledge. You can usually spot these vendors at any market because they already have a line before market starts. Get as close to these folks as you can and pick up those gold nuggets they drop. They do not mind sharing, at least all of our interactions have been very welcoming and we have built lasting friendships.

Another thing I have noticed is that you can never predict what people will be looking for.. I remember one year we had a bumper crop of Nadapenos these are the non-spicy version of. Jalapeños. We couldn’t give them away that year.. Then next season we decided not to grow them. Guess what!? We had at least one person ask for them each market. You can’t predict what people will want but we have learned to grow the staples, tomatoes, squash, cucumbers,cabbage, peppers, green beans, leafy greens, onions, potatoes, and radishes, Then you can toss in a few surprises to see how they do!

You also may have some customers that become your favorites. There are quite a few for us but I will say there is one particular couple that warms my heart when I see them. They are an elderly couple who have been together for many years and always walking around the market hand in hand. Ryan and I always smile when we see them. They are the definition of true love.

There are also some mild stressors that come along with market. For us early on in the season it’s typically what in the world are we going to put on our table!? I find this the most difficult for us, no matter how early in the season we try to start something tends to come up and working full time careers it is difficult to find enough daylight to get everything done on time. Each year we get better and find new ways to figure it out.

The other stressor is that some markets are a little more strict with the rules. Because of this we try to attend conferences in our off season to stay in the know. I do quite a bit of reading and research as well! We also have an occasional run in with the health inspector at our markets. I remember there was a rule brought up about our bagged greens and it just didn’t seem right to me because I follow other specialty crop growers in Iowa and they were selling their greens the same way we were so I called the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship. I met a really great inspector there and he educated me on what we can do. Turns out it was a misunderstanding that he helped get cleared up with the health inspector for me. Have the courage to respectfully pushback.

I would like to leave you with this..Next time you hear about a farmers market taking place in your community do what you can to share it with others and show up. At the end of the day you are supporting the single mom who uses one of her days off to bake amazing creations in her kitchen while her daughter helps her sell at market. Or those newby veggie farmers trying to work two full time jobs and always fashionably late to market because they just got off work loading up what they can and got half way down the road and had to turn back because they forgot something! Show up for those folks, show up for the OGs, and the new vendors who were so unbelievably nervous the days prior to market but worked up every once of courage to come and literally lay their hearts out on their tables.

Moral of the story.. Farmers Markets are the windows into your community. It is also a place where you may get the opportunity to see people put everything they love on display. Trust me.. if you look you will see it. ✌🏼-Jamie

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You Signed Up For A Local Farm CSA (Vegetable Share) Now What!?

Our CSA is about to begin here in July! I think about how customers can get the most out of our vegetables with not having to spend a ton of time. This thought crosses my mind often for our customers because we eat, sleep, and breathe the vegetable garden this time of year.

Maybe you are a returning CSA customer, maybe you are brand new to this CSA thing, or trying another farms CSA program or maybe you are considering joining. Here are some ideas on ways you can get the most out of your CSA (vegetable share)!

MEAL PREPPING IS KEY!

Plan on getting leafy greens of sorts! There are so many ways you can use these veggies but the question is what is the best and quickest way?? If I could offer a suggestion I personally think meal prepping is very beneficial when belonging to a CSA. If you are like us you are always on the go! Give mason jar salads a try! You can incorporate quite a few of the veggies you get into these jar salads and be a quick meal prep! I did start a Pinterest board of some ideas to get you started! Just remember your greens are one of the last layers and your dressing is first!

USE YOUR FARMS WEBSITE!

Ask if your farm has a website! You likely already know that Mad Acre Farms does! I continue to work on it adding recipes and updating ways to navigate through it. We will offer recipe ideas and most importantly ways to store your veggies to get the most out of them! Don’t miss out on your farms website! They will likely have some gold nuggets in there for you! We will put links in our weekly emails to help guide you!

QUICK PRESERVING TIPS!

We will share ways to store for longer lasting vegetables. For example when tomatoes start to hit your share you may not have time to get to them right away just freeze them! I am still using tomatoes from last year’s harvest in our soups and casseroles as a base! Don’t worry I put some ideas together on how you can do that on our website! Also don’t forget about saving your radish tops and combining that with your basil to make a quick pesto! Then just freeze it in silicon ice trays, pop them out once frozen and store them in a freezer bag for later use!

Learn more here!

There are so many vegetables that you can freeze for later use it is amazing! We will be sure to let you know in our weekly emails ideas on quick ways to preserve!

I have learned that flash freezing is your friend! This is when you cut up your vegetables and lay them flat on a pan and freeze them for 3-4 hrs then throw them in a ziplock back. I have made the mistake of not doing this and just throw them in a bag to freeze and it comes out as a big glob of vegetables!

I am not huge on canning in the summer. It just takes a lot of time but.. in my off season I pick it up to learn more. The freezing method buys me time and allows me to can on my terms. I do however enjoy a nice dill pickle! Please don’t judge me on this next tip but I will buy those big club jars of pickles and save the brine. This season I will cut up my cucumbers and throw them into that brine. We also have some recipe ideas for your own pickles from scratch but if you are like me you just may not have time. Save your pickle juice! Cucumber season is fast approaching!

There are so many herbs and vegetables you can dry or dehydrate. We provide ideas on ways to dry without buying a dehydrator or if you have one offer ideas for both. If you are not going to use those herbs in your share that week don’t worry we will give you some ideas on how to quickly preserve it for later! For example you can easily dry kale in your oven to make a kale powder to toss into your meals or incorporate into a smoothie. Don’t sleep on kale people that leafy green is a healthy powerhouse!

I could go on for days on ways to make the most out of your vegetable share but at the end of the day you need to do what works for you. Just have a plan and I guarantee that you will maximize your CSA share!

Moral of the story… Find your local farmer! Learn more about them through their socials, website, and the markets they attend. Interview them, and if they pass the test give their CSA a try! They are out there waiting for your support ♥️ – ✌🏼 Jamie

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The Garden Made Me Do It…

I finally understand why my mother spent most of her free time in the summer months coming home with loads of vegetable plants and flowers. The 5 kids would help her pull weeds but I never really gave the idea of gardening a chance.. I was always ready to be done before I even started. I missed out on some pretty great opportunities in the garden. If only I could turn back time..

So here I am in my 40 somethings trying to figure out how to make the garden my career. Crazy right!? Not for me. Let me share with you a few things I have learned from this garden.

In a world full of chaos and even on my noisiest of days the garden brings me silence and peace. I find myself walking the rows and looking up what that plant needs to grow to its fullest potential. Not even realizing the garden is doing the exact same thing to me. I recently saw a question being asked about growing leafy greens in Iowa during the summer. Most people responded to not bother. Us on the other hand do bother with it and figure out ways to grow sweet crunchy greens even on the hottest of days. The garden made us do it..

The garden has been our metaphorical couch through those very uncomfortable therapy discussions. For some reason those deep discussions happen in the garden. The garden always has a way of keeping those heavy burdens and we always feel a little lighter walking away. The garden knows our deepest fears and the moments we hold so close to our hearts. It knows our secrets..

The garden has taught us a little about time management and priorities over the years. We continue to adapt and learn there a so many ways to tend to a garden. Watering and pulling weeds by far are our most time sucking responsibilities. The garden has taught us to think outside the box to build efficiency. The last two years we added greenhouses. We are more intentional with watering which reduces weed growth. Don’t get me wrong we are still working on figuring out a better system but this garden forces us to be creative and prioritize our time more each year. This year was easier than the last. It just means we are growing in all different aspects of life.

The garden has also taught me patience. This is a big one for me. I am the type of person who wants instant results and when I don’t see them I move on. I have yet to see instant results in the garden and find myself coming back to try again with any free time I can find. The garden brings me true happiness.

The garden also pushes me outside of my comfort zone in the kitchen. I have taken a new approach with what I eat and find myself trying new recipes from the garden. I started to incorporate last year’s harvest that I freeze dried into our meals. Now I am far from a top chef but the garden has given me the courage to try and to try again.

Moral of the story…Everybody deserves to find a space in the world that makes you forget about the chaos and silence the noise…Find your garden.

✌🏼Jamie

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The Market Farm

For us farmers market season is just beginning. We have found for our current schedule with our full time careers joining the later markets gives us more opportunities to have that much needed buffer to get our farm ready for the season.

That doesn’t go without its own hurdles for us.. trust me when I tell you this every year we face new challenges! This year Mother Nature reminded us who was in charge with the continuous days of rain.

Here at the farm we prepare for market in December. We do this by sitting down talking about the opportunities we had and what we learned from them along with what we are going to do differently for next season. Last season it was a cover crop fiasco. We both just didn’t educate ourselves enough on the proper process. This caused a delay in us joining market on time. So this season we elected to not do cover crop and conditioned the beds differently.

We see value in learning from others in similar spaces. So we turn to organizations like Practical Farmers of Iowa. Where we meet like minded people who are running successful market farms. It is said that if you want to be amazing at something surround yourself with people who are doing what you love and are doing it better than you.

We also were learning and are still learning greenhouse growing. This year using what we learned last year gave us the ability to have earlier crops. The problem we ran into this season already was timing.. we had an abundance of an early crop with minimal on farm customer traffic and the timing was too early for our markets. However, a positive note is that we did have some customer traffic where our website was used to find our current product and purchased, then picked up at the farm. To me even though foot traffic was limited it was a huge win because it showed us people are willing to travel for quality locally grown food. We just need to dial in consistency and variety and I need to have more courage to push our products more.

Another topic we discussed in our off season was easier ways to provide a product to our customers on any given day without disruption from our day jobs while still providing flexibility to our customers. Is that even possible!? That is when we decided having a farmstand would be ideal here at the farm and meet those needs.

We recently brought in a building to start working this plan into existence. We also are working on a mobile stand that goes hand in hand with our farmstand. This is a priority for us this season. We also will be working on building visibility into what is available at the stand at any given time. Yep.. still working on that idea through our website! We then took this a step further and got our farmstand qualified for the Farmers Market Nutrition Program. This means we can accept the Farmers Market WIC checks right here at the farm. The only stipulation is we need to be present when using, along with the stand being physically attended for two hours out of the week to be considered as a qualified farmstand. Absolutely worth it!

For the sake of being transparent.. the biggest things for me at least with owning a market farm is the amount of directions you are pulled in. The farmstand is being placed at the top of our priority list right under the market garden. We also are committed to adding variety to the farm to bring in more customers. We are doing this by selling pasture raised poultry this season as well. That is for another blog!

I often wonder if we were in a more convenient location would we get more on farm sales.. then I realize that people are willing to travel for quality. We just need to step up our game this season to make it happen and bring consistency and options.

It amazes me each year what this market farm teaches us. I am finishing this blog after Ryan and I worked day and night on this garden. We didn’t want to stop but our bodies said enough is enough. This farm is our passion, our diamond in the rough.

Moral of the story… If it were easy everyone would do it.. That statement becomes so evidently clear when you find something you believe in that pushes you so far out of your comfort zone it isn’t even funny. I hope you have found your passion and if you haven’t look outside your comfort zone I can almost guarantee it’s in plain sight waiting for you. ♥️✌🏼-Jamie

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Staycation

For the last two years Ryan and I take two weeks off from our careers. It’s a vacation from our corporate commitments. We don’t go anywhere fancy, we stay right here at the farm. We refer to it as our staycation. However, we work day and night getting everything ready on the farm. We work so hard that we quite literally crawl into the house after it gets so dark we can no longer see…our bodies are unbelievably exhausted. Even with that being said, this time of year is when we feel the most alive.

This is our time to not only to unwind but live in the moment of our dream job. The entire goal is to assure the market garden is up and running. Once that is complete we jump onto the next highest priority project.

We are on season four of Keeping Up With Mad Acre Farms. The first year I admittedly wasn’t fully bought in. Ryan was doing everything on his own. I helped but I honestly wasn’t giving him my full effort. I only remember taking just a few short days off that first year. The end of that season is when everything changed for me. 2021 was my pivotal year that my entire perspective on life changed along with my priorities.

The next year was me finding myself again.. Poor Ryan didn’t stand a chance with keeping my feet on the ground. I went buck wild in the garden world. I wanted to try to grow everything. I knew absolutely nothing about gardening but I didn’t care I was in deep. That year I took one week of staycation to help with the market garden. I was so focused on the shiny things of the garden world that I stepped over the basics all while pulling Ryan through it with me. I was hurricane Jamie in his world that season. Looking back he was so supportive of me it was insane. We tackled so many new things that year. It was a true testament of what our super power was.. it was us working as a team. That year we added an additional market and was our first year doing pasture raised poultry. It was a successful year in so many ways.

The next season I decided it was time to take a leap and request a two week staycation from my corporate career. The anxiety that came over me from being gone that long took over me.. I had a tough time pulling away but Ryan and the farm needed me. This year was a rough start due to a cover crop gone wrong. We spent the entire time working on our market garden. This was a big year for us because we had our first CSA member. It meant someone believed in what we were doing, they believed in our farm so much they committed to our product. The pressure to be better than the last year was so unbelievably heavy. That year we also ended up losing over half of our chicken flock to a mink. We made the decision to not do pasture raised poultry because we knew the risk. That issue alone was such a distraction. This was a monumental year just reminding us that we are stronger than anything thrown our way.

Now here we are season four. We have two greenhouses in production already and are on a two week staycation. I am not as anxious as years past. I have learned that corporate America will run the same way it did before me and will run just fine when I am not there. This farm however needs us. We are the engine that powers it. So yes we will put everything we got into making the market garden a success this year even with the rain setbacks and delays we are so much further ahead than the last season and the season before that.

The Greenhouse Project

Then once we wrap up the market garden we will be jumping into getting the pasture ready for the bringing back of the pasture raised poultry along with assuring our farm security is ready to take on his role in farm leadership. A very vital part of our farms success this season.

I could go on for days on the things we got going on at the farm this season. We have slowed down a bit on our socials to focus on the farm and assuring a successful season for our CSA members and farm customers. Don’t worry we will pick back up with updates very soon!

We continue to grow our skills from lessons learned. By far our staycation is the best vacation we take nowadays. I have discovered I no longer need fancy trips or getaways. I could get lost in this farm for days on end. Time goes by way too fast.. I am going to enjoy every minute of it.

Moral of the story.. Find something you love that makes you feel more alive than you have ever felt. You usually know if you found it if it scares the hell out of you, but you keep chasing it because the thought of losing it is even more terrifying. ✌🏼-Jamie

  • An Old Barn That is Restoring Us

    I remember the first week we moved into this Extreme Home Makeover house. Truthfully, my heart was still somewhere in Colorado. I knew coming back to Iowa was the right decision, but I had not fully bought into the vision my husband was so eager to jump into. I was physically here, but emotionally I was still holding on to the what-ifs.

    It was right after Christmas when he asked me to bundle up, head outside, and bring the camera. I will be honest, I was not pleasant. I was sarcastic and dismissive, and I gave him a hard time about documenting our journey on YouTube. Deep down, I think I was afraid. Afraid I would have to dust off old skills I learned in college, skills I never really had the chance to use or fully believe in. I was also afraid of what people would think. After all, I had left Iowa to prove I could make it on my own, and here I was, coming back and stepping into something I did not feel qualified to do and did not think I deserved. So I packed that vision away and tucked it next to the box of dreams labeled maybe someday.

    I handed him the camera anyway.

    Our First Farm Tour

    I had no idea that moment would quietly mark the beginning of an entirely new life for us.

    As I stood there filming him share his hopes for the property, I remember thinking, how are we ever going to pull this off? Recently, I rewatched that video almost five years later while searching for old footage of the barn we ultimately decided to keep and restore. In that video, we casually said we were going to tear it down.

    Life had other plans.

    That first summer brought more firsts than we could have imagined. We began to understand how much work the land truly needed. There were moments of regret and defeat, but more often there were moments of progress, pride, and renewed vision. About a year and a half later, we launched The Barn Fund Project.

    I remember Ryan asking me to design a T-shirt to help raise money for the restoration. I did. Then winter came and mysterious packages started arriving. I watched my husband slowly assemble a commercial vinyl cutter I did not ask for and was not prepared for. The confidence this man has in me is, at times, overwhelming.

    When I asked why he did not talk to me first, he said, “Because I knew you would shoot it down.”

    That vinyl cutter sat untouched for a year.

    Then another winter came, and something in me shifted. I decided it was time to figure it out. I sat beside that machine in tears more than once, frustrated, angry, convinced my husband had forced this on me. But those feelings did not last long. Because deep down, I knew something else was true. He believed in me because he knew I always figure things out.

    And I did.

    I am still figuring it out.

    Then a hat press showed up. Same conversation. Same doubt. And that summer at the market, I started selling hats for the Barn Fund Project, fully designing them myself. I fell in love with the process. At the same time, we were building greenhouses, opening new growing spaces, launching a farmstand, and doing all of it while working full-time jobs.

    Life was stressful.
    But it was rewarding.

    Just a month and a half ago, Ryan was asked to speak at an event. He asked if I could create 40 shirts using vinyl we already had, cost effective, good quality, and fast. Two years ago, that request would have paralyzed me. This time, my answer was easy.

    Absolutely.

    I designed it. Cut it. Weeded it. Pressed it. Even tackled a two color design. Then I finally used that puffy vinyl I had been too afraid to touch and ordered trucker hats to match. On event day, I ran the farm table while Ryan presented. I controlled the slides. Played the videos. We moved in sync.

    We were a team.

    The support we received that day, and the shirts and hats sold, went straight back into the barn fund.

    Earlier this year, Ryan asked a hard question. What if we just put up a pole barn instead? Everyone had opinions about what we should do versus what our hearts were telling us.

    My answer was immediate.

    No.

    We made a promise to save her. And yes, I call the barn her, because I see myself in her. Weathered. Overlooked. Full of potential. I told Ryan I did not care if it took our lifetime. We would die trying. We would save, sell merch, and restore her without taking on new debt.

    He looked at me and said, “Okay. Let’s get this plan moving.”

    It took months to find anyone willing to even look at the barn. Then one day, the call came. God sent. The roof and siding were completed, and not even a day later, Ryan was out there painting her the color that has lived in our hearts for years.

    At first, I was upset. Then I understood.

    This barn is pulling us forward.

    That same day, I went and bought more paint.

    Because this barn, without a doubt, is restoring us right alongside her.

    Moral of the Story – Fill your life with people who will inspire and motivate you to live outside of your comfort zone. I have realized that most of my success has come from the paths with the most resistance. Don’t forget that. ❤️✌🏼-Jamie

  • Untamed

    They say that there is someone for everyone in this world. Ryan and I couldn’t be more opposite it seems but I without a doubt know he is my person. I know this because I do not think we would have made it this far in our journey with all the challenges that have been thrown our way. We have seemed to walk through the fire hand and hand overcoming those challenges with no injuries just lessons and growth.

    Ryan and I met while attending Kirkwood Community College. We met in 2000. He tells the story a bit different than I do so you are going to get my version. I remember walking through the Linn Hall lobby to attend my class. Ryan seemed to always be in the lobby during my passing. He would say hello to me every time I passed by. He did this for weeks. I was extremely shy and would just keep walking and not speak until… it was finals week just before Christmas break.

    I walked by Ryan and he of course spoke. Something in me gave me the courage to say hello back. He had a shocked look on his face and asked me when I was going to take him to lunch. I just smiled and walked away.

    Later in that day I saw Ryan, he will tell you I followed him.. and I will admit I was hoping to see him. I worked up all the courage I had and as soon as I saw him I asked him when he was going to take me to lunch. He said now! He told me he left his wallet at home and had to go get it.. What really was going on was that Ryan was a caregiver to a quadriplegic gentleman to help get him through college. He ran into the house and told him he scored a date and asked for a $20 advance. We ended up going to KFC. Ryan had the pricing figured out.. he was praying I wouldn’t get anything more than a tenders meal. It just so happened that is exactly what I got.

    Through his eyes

    Ryan and I were pretty much inseparable after our lunch date. I didn’t introduce Ryan to my family for a while. If I am being honest I was nervous. Nervous that Ryan would see how I grew up from very humble beginnings and I had a bit of a facade going to hide my past. At that point I had probably 15-20 store credit cards and a majority of them maxed out. I was also a little embarrassed of how I grew up and didn’t want to scare him away. If I am also being honest here.. we didn’t have much diversity in our little town. My family has a splash of diversity due to my mother being Hispanic but I was worried Ryan would be uncomfortable… in actuality it was me that was uncomfortable. I didn’t want to have to be put in a position to defend our love. I knew very early in our relationship that we were two untamed hearts and I was absolutely head over heels in love with him and if I had to make a choice I would choose him.

    Ryan met my family a few months into dating and as crazy as he already knew I was he expected the same from my family.. let’s just say we didn’t disappoint and he stuck around. My family welcomed Ryan in with open arms.

    Fast forward about a year into our relationship.. I found out I was pregnant. We were just young adults who were just getting to know each other now bringing a life into this world. We welcomed our son into this world and agreed at that time we were going to hold off on marriage and focus on our education and our child. That was exactly what we did. We both worked full time jobs while attending school at night. We both obtained our Bachelor’s degrees in just a few short years. We were determined to be successful not only for us but for our son as well.

    About 5 years after our son was born Ryan proposed to me at my grandparents home in front of my family. What I didn’t know was he had taken my father fishing that prior Fall and asked him for my hand in marriage. My father of course told him at that time he better be sure because there was a no return policy. What I have learned over the years is that Ryan is an old soul. He truly is one of a kind.

    Here we are 25 years later and stronger than ever. I look back on all the challenges that have been placed in front of us knowing we could have easily gave up but we didn’t. We had so many tables where we pulled up our own chairs… there were times we didn’t even have a table to sit at so we had to bring our own. I always go back to the love we have for each other. Our hearts are untamed and that is 100% our power.

    The lessons we have learned along the way was our preparation to our biggest challenge yet. This farm..

    Moral of the story…genuine love is wild and untamed that absolutely nothing can stand in its way. You don’t really find out its authenticity in the good times.. it’s the bad times where it tends to show its truest power.

    -✌🏼🦁♥️Jamie

  • Her Storm, Her Rainbow

    2025 has chewed me up and spit me out. And still, here I am, learning how to love this new version of myself. I know I’m different. I am not the same woman I was a year ago, and I don’t think I’m supposed to be. The reality of how short life truly is has taken hold of me in a way I can’t unsee.

    I know I have to lead with purpose and intention, but I’ll be honest, it’s hard right now. There are scars on my heart that are still healing, and I’m not entirely sure who this woman is yet. I know exactly who I want to become, I’m just moving through the fog of how to reach her. This storm feels like the storm of my life.

    But don’t feel bad for me. Don’t worry about me. I already know this will shape me into a better woman. Some work has to be done alone, and this is mine.

    This past year, I took a leap, pouring myself into learning new skills and new ventures, partly to survive and partly to avoid the pain. What I didn’t realize at the time was that I was healing by stretching myself beyond what was comfortable. Growth found me there.

    It’s almost surreal how much I relate to the barn project, restoring something weathered and revealing beauty and grace that was always there, just hidden beneath time and storms. When you hear me talk about that old barn, know that I’m also talking about myself.

    This is my storm. And I know, without question, that once I make it through, it will also be my rainbow.

    Moral of the Story – Dear 2025 you can respectfully kiss my ass. ❤️✌🏼-Jamie

  • Her Story

    Weathered and stressed, aging in ways she never asked for. Everyone around her sees her true potential, but she struggles to believe she is still worthy, still capable, still carrying so much to give. She remembers the ups and downs, the storms she has survived, the years of being an afterthought.

    Then one day everything shifts. She is lifted from the shadows of her comfort zone and carried forward, finally brought to the front of the line to be seen and heard. She is still weathered, still aged, still stressed, but now she knows she has to be strong for what comes next.

    She stands there, front and center, with every eye waiting to see her next move. What she does not realize, what she has not realized for years, is that she is not alone this time.

    As she brushes the dust of doubt off piece by piece, she starts to understand her true value. Some days those old dusty boards creep back in, trying to remind her she is nothing more than an aging fragment of what she once was.

    But they never stay long.
    Because she shines a little brighter now.
    Because she finally sees her purpose, bigger, bolder, and more beautiful than she ever believed it could be.

    Moral of the story – Aged and weathered does not mean you are worth less. It means you carry a strength, a story, and a beauty that only time can create. Your value grows with every storm you have survived. Surround yourself with the ones who can already see that in you, because they will help you rise into the purpose you were always meant for.

    ❤️✌🏼-Jamie

  • Tables

    Can you remember a time when you tried to sit at a table that wasn’t meant for you? For me, it started young at family gatherings where the kids had their table, the adults had theirs, and there was no crossing that invisible line.

    That theme carried on into adulthood. I often found myself squeezing into spaces where I didn’t quite belong, dragging up my own chair and proving I was “worthy” of elbow room. But here’s the truth: I’m tired of constantly carving out space at someone else’s table.

    The shift came in my early twenties, on a road trip with my husband and our 4-year-old son. We had spent the day diamond mining in Arkansas, simple, affordable fun for a little boy obsessed with treasure hunting. On the way home, we stopped at a nearly empty Pizza Hut in Arkansas. The sign said seat yourself, so we did. And then…nothing. No greeting, no service. Just the weight of stares from the staff behind the counter.

    My husband leaned in and whispered, “We need to leave. Now.” As we walked out, their eyes followed us. By the time we reached the car, a truckload of men pulled in and tailed us until we got out of town.

    That was the moment my world tilted. The moment I realized that while I’d always had the chance to pull up a chair, my husband and my son might never even be offered that opportunity. Not because of who they are, but because of the color of their skin.

    That reality still sits heavy. But it also fuels our purpose. We no longer wait for someone else to make space. We build our own tables. And at our tables, no one has to fight for room. There is space, always, for everyone.

    Moral of the story… Build a table big enough for everyone and if you are at a table that doesn’t have enough chairs maybe its time to build your own.. ❤️✌🏼- Jamie


  • Along the way

    I never thought a garden could teach me so much about myself. But here I am—stronger, braver, and more confident than ever, all thanks to the lessons it’s planted in my life.

    Not too long ago, I was a timid, insecure woman who would back away at the first sign of resistance. But these days? Oh, no. Not anymore. This garden has transformed me. I’m sowing fierce—yes, that’s sow fierce, and the spelling is absolutely intentional.

    Sure, I fail. Often. But every misstep pushes me closer to my goals. I’ve made it my mission to learn everything I can about becoming a successful gardener, a thriving farmer, and, above all, a better human being. And if there’s one thing that I have learned is that our best outcomes have come from the things we were most intentional about.

    A couple of seasons ago, we planted a 50-foot row of Orient Express eggplants—a slender, gorgeous variety that thrives like crazy. The plants were prolific, but here’s the catch: our market wasn’t exactly clamoring for eggplants.

    So what did we do? We shared them! Our amazing neighbor is an eggplant enthusiast, so we’d drop off bundles of them every chance we got. And when we did sell them, we priced them at $1 each—affordable, but not quite enough to match their incredible growth.

    This experience taught us a lot about aligning our crops with what our market actually needs. And it’s a reminder that every season is an opportunity to learn, adjust, and grow—both literally and figuratively.



    Even though eggplants were not flying off our market table I found it incredibly important to learn everything I could about them. This would then allow me to promote them a little more confidently! So here is a little about what I have learned so far about how great these vegetables truly are. This is also why I implemented them into my own diet. I even started to juice them with other fruits from my farm.

    Nutritional Benefits

    1. Low in Calories and High in Fiber
      • Eggplant is perfect for weight management, providing satiety with minimal calories.
      • Its fiber content supports healthy digestion and helps regulate blood sugar.
    2. Rich in Antioxidants
      • Contains nasunin, a powerful antioxidant found in the purple skin, which protects brain cells and reduces oxidative stress.
      • Packed with other antioxidants like chlorogenic acid, which has anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial properties.
    3. Heart Health
      • Helps reduce bad cholesterol (LDL) levels thanks to its fiber and antioxidants.
      • Supports healthy blood pressure due to its potassium content, which balances sodium levels in the body.
    4. Blood Sugar Control
      • Low in carbohydrates and high in fiber, eggplant slows the absorption of sugar, making it great for managing diabetes.
    5. Bone Health
      • Contains small amounts of calcium, magnesium, and vitamin K, which support strong bones and reduce the risk of osteoporosis.
    6. Brain Health
      • Nasunin not only protects brain cells but also supports better blood flow to the brain, enhancing cognitive function.
    7. Skin and Hair
      • Rich in vitamins A, C, and E, eggplant promotes healthy skin and hair by fighting free radicals and supporting collagen production.
    8. Cancer Prevention Potential
      • Chlorogenic acid may help combat cancer-causing free radicals and protect cells from mutations.

    How to Incorporate Eggplant

    • Grill or roast it for a smoky flavor.
    • Add to stews, curries, or pasta dishes.
    • Use as a healthy substitute in lasagna or for making eggplant parmesan.
    • Blend into dips like baba ghanoush for a nutritious snack.

    Selling eggplant has been a journey of trial and error, but one full of lessons! Like I had mentioned, a couple of seasons ago, we struggled to move a skinny variety called Orient Express. While the plants produced like champions, the demand just wasn’t there. So, we decided to switch gears and grow a more traditional variety the next season. And guess what? It was a game-changer!

    We still didn’t sell out every week, but the improvement was undeniable. More eggplant left the farmstand and market tables, and less came back home. Progress is progress, right?

    Last season, we upped the ante again, planting another 50-foot row of eggplant. We even experimented with a beautiful white variety in the greenhouse. Unfortunately, timing wasn’t on our side. By the time the plants started producing, the season was wrapping up. But all wasn’t lost—we freeze-dried the leftover eggplant to enjoy later, turning what could have been a total miss into an exciting win.

    This experience taught us that gardening is all about adaptability. Each season, we try, we tweak, and we grow—literally and figuratively. Who knew eggplant could teach us so much about resilience and flexibility?

    What’s your favorite lesson from the garden? Share it with us below—we love hearing your stories! 🌱🍆

    If you are thinking about growing eggplants here are a few ideas to help you with growing:

    1. Choose the Right Variety

    • Select varieties suited to your growing region.
      • Popular options: Black BeautyFairy Tale (compact and great for containers), or Ping Tung Long (prolific and heat-tolerant).

    2. Plant at the Right Time

    • Warm Weather Lovers: Eggplants thrive in temperatures of 70–85°F during the day and no lower than 50°F at night.
    • Start seeds indoors 8–10 weeks before your last frost date or purchase young transplants.
    • Wait to plant outdoors until soil temperatures are at least 60°F.

    3. Provide the Perfect Spot

    • Full Sun: Eggplants need 6–8 hours of direct sunlight daily.
    • Well-Draining Soil: Amend soil with compost or organic matter to improve drainage and fertility. Aim for a pH of 5.5–7.0.

    4. Space and Support

    • Spacing: Allow 18–24 inches between plants and 24–36 inches between rows.
    • Staking: Provide stakes or cages to support the plants as they grow, preventing heavy fruits from bending or breaking stems.

    5. Feed and Water Wisely

    • Fertilizer: Use a balanced fertilizer (5-10-5) when planting, then switch to one higher in phosphorus and potassium once the plant sets fruit.
    • Watering: Keep the soil consistently moist but not waterlogged. Deep watering 1–2 times per week is ideal.
    • Mulch: Add a layer of mulch to retain soil moisture and suppress weeds.

    6. Watch Out for Pests and Diseases

    • Common Pests:
      • Flea Beetles: Use row covers or neem oil to deter these tiny pests that chew holes in leaves.
      • Aphids and Spider Mites: Spray with insecticidal soap or a strong jet of water.
    • Diseases: Practice crop rotation and avoid overhead watering to reduce fungal issues like blight.

    7. Harvest at the Right Time

    • Pick when fruits are glossy, firm, and slightly smaller than full size (overripe eggplants become bitter).
    • Use pruning shears or a sharp knife to cut the fruit, leaving a short stem attached.

    8. Bonus Tips for High Yields

    • Warm the Soil: Use black plastic mulch to raise soil temperatures early in the season.
    • Pollination: Eggplants are self-pollinating, but gently shaking the flowers can improve fruit set.
    • Companion Planting: Grow near marigolds or basil to deter pests and attract pollinators.
    • Dill or Cilantro are another great option to help combat the potato beetle. Last season we had a bout of potato beetles causing some issues with our eggplants. Having a companion crop would have been helpful. This would have also been another option to use as an additional cash crop!

    Here’s a piece of advice.. don’t over do it in the eggplant space just yet. If you don’t know your market I would lean on a smaller planting. I don’t necessarily think that eggplant will be your money maker but it does add color and variety to your table! It should also land on your customers dinner table weekly and it most likely would if they only knew the benefits of these vegetables.

    Moral of the story: Take the time to truly learn about the dreams you’re chasing. Whatever it is you’re diving into, understanding the basics will save you so much time, energy, and frustration in the long run.

    Trust me, I’ve been there—scrambling in the thick of the growing season, trying to figure out my next move when time was slipping through my fingers. It’s overwhelming, but it taught me something invaluable: Preparation isn’t just a step; it’s the foundation of success.

    So, invest in yourself. Read, plan, ask questions, and set yourself up to thrive—not just survive. Because when the season comes, and everything starts to bloom, you’ll be ready to grow right alongside it. 🌱

    Stay prepared, stay inspired. You’ve got this. ❤️✌🏼 – Jamie

  • Motivational Vomit

    I’ve had the privilege to work on a project at my job that allows me to connect with nearly every leader in my division. Many would see this as a golden opportunity to build a standout resume—and it truly is—but here’s the thing: I’m not in the market for building resumes anymore. My focus has shifted.

    Because of this, I bring a very different perspective to the project and what motivates me. This work isn’t just about pushing myself out of my comfort zone—it’s about growing through discomfort and helping others do the same. At times, I’ve found myself teetering on the edge of negativity, tempted to sit alongside those who struggle to adapt to change. But every time I feel that pull, something reminds me of the bigger picture. That reminder sparks a light in me, and I’ve seen it shine onto others, lifting them when they need it most.

    Through this experience, I’ve learned something profound: every single person I interact with is carrying something heavy. Life doesn’t pause for work or projects. Knowing this gives me an incredible opportunity—to turn what might be a terrible day for someone into a halfway decent one, simply by being a positive force.

    I won’t pretend it’s always easy. Like everyone else in this project, I’ve received feedback—sometimes colorful feedback. One person even told me my conversations can come off as “motivational vomit.” I couldn’t help but laugh, because I get it. But here’s the thing: I haven’t stopped. Why? Because over time, those same people begin to realize that my words, my energy, come from a genuine place. Consistency builds trust, and trust creates change.

    Now, let me share why this matters so much to me.

    Just over a year ago, I hit one of the darkest points in my life. I felt like I didn’t care if I walked this planet or not. I was drowning in depression and didn’t even realize it. My husband bore the brunt of my pain, becoming my emotional punching bag as I spiraled. We were on the brink of separation. I felt like a complete failure, even though I painted a perfect picture for the outside world. My husband was the only one who knew I was waging an invisible war inside.

    But he didn’t give up on me. He pulled me out of that darkness. It took months—months of hard, uncomfortable self-reflection, therapy, and finding ways to heal. I had to rebuild myself with intent. I started reading, seeking professional help, and digging deep into my past. Along the way, I began this blog—a space to confront wounds I had ignored for far too long.

    That’s why I pour every ounce of positivity into others. I know what it’s like to feel invisible, to fight a silent battle. But I also know how much of a difference a kind word, a moment of understanding, or even just a spark of hope can make. Some days, this work leaves me completely drained. It’s a constant fight to keep my own negative thoughts at bay. But I’ve found peace in learning new skills, diving into creative outlets, and focusing on personal growth. To others, it might look like I’m scattered, but these things ground me and keep the darkness in check.

    Moral of the story: You never know what someone else is battling beneath the surface. Unless they tell you, you may never see the signs. And you might not recognize those signs unless you’ve walked a similar path. So, be the light and the encouragement others need, whether or not anyone is watching. Your kindness, your positivity—it can change lives in ways you may never fully realize.

    ❤️✌🏼 Jamie


  • 🌱 Rediscovering Myself: A Journey of Growth and Positivity 🌱

    The past year and a half has been a transformative chapter in my life—a time dedicated to rediscovering me. Somewhere along the way, I lost sight of who I truly was, but I’m finally finding my way back.

    It hasn’t been easy. I had to make tough choices about the people and energy I allowed into my life. Outside pressures—those unspoken (or spoken) expectations we all feel—were weighing me down. I was torn between who I used to be and the evolving version of myself, while still surrounded by people who thought they knew me better than I knew myself.

    What I discovered wasn’t easy to swallow: some of those closest to me, while not intentionally harmful, were casting shadows on my growth. Their negativity and doubt crept in, suffocating the joy and newness I was trying to embrace. These were people I once admired, whose opinions deeply influenced my choices. But as I leaned into my personal growth, I realized they no longer served the life I was building.

    So, I made a choice. I chose me.

    Focusing on myself came with its own challenges. When I shared my small wins, I was often met with silence from those I expected to cheer me on. Instead, strangers—people I never imagined—became my greatest supporters, standing in ovation while what I thought was my long-time “support system” whispered about how I’d changed. Funny how life works, isn’t it?

    Today, my circle is small but intentional. The light I allow into my life is positive, and the moment I sense negativity, I walk away without hesitation. I’ve built a new cheering section, one that lifts me up, and I’m running toward it unapologetically.

    Do I still struggle? Of course. Imposter syndrome creeps in sometimes—questions like, What if they’re right? What if this is just a phase? But then I’m reminded of the purpose behind what we’re building here on the farm and having my bestfriend right beside me sharing the same visions. This isn’t a fleeting moment; it’s a life we’ve chosen with intention. And the reminders come in countless ways—big and small.

    I’ve learned to listen to those reminders and embrace an unapologetic approach to my life and choices. I finally know what I need to be happy, and I refuse to compromise on that.

    Moral of the story…If you’re on a similar journey, know this: it’s okay to choose yourself. It’s okay to walk away from the old and embrace the new. You deserve a life that makes you feel alive.
     ❤️✌🏼 Jamie

  • The Motivated Spouse

    My husband is my soulmate, my best friend, and my safe space. A few years ago, I added “business partner” to that list. Everything seemed to change when our son moved out and we moved back home to Iowa.

    Looking back, I realize we were just trying to figure out who we were again. We were two young people in love who started a family early. At that time, we didn’t have much in common with our friends, who were out living their best lives, while we worked multiple jobs to take care of our newly formed family.

    One thing that’s always been true is that my husband is a dreamer and a go-getter. What I didn’t fully realize until we returned to Iowa was how deeply he wanted me to be part of his success. Let me explain.

    Over the years, my husband had many side hustles (I’ve talked more about this in a prior blog). These ventures soaked up a lot of his free time, while I focused on climbing the corporate ladder, which often required an exhausting amount of travel. During that time, he quite literally ran our household and raised our son. For that, I will forever be grateful. Our son is an incredible human being, and my husband played a major role in shaping him into who he is today.

    This farm didn’t come about much differently than one of my husband’s usual side hustle pitches—except this time, he brought a level of conviction I hadn’t seen before. I had no choice but to run with it. And here I am, five years later, writing about how this farm has changed my life. This was no side hustle; it was a mission.

    My husband continues to push me outside my comfort zones. He believes so strongly in my abilities that he quite literally wills me into making things happen. When we first met in college, I was a Graphic Design major. Back then, he was my biggest cheerleader, hyping me up and even lining up people for me to create album covers for. I didn’t see what he saw in me back then—but I do now.

    Fast forward 20 years, and he’s still at it. He recently bought a commercial vinyl cutter and told me to figure it out. That machine almost broke me, but I eventually found a love for creating hats, which helped us make our money back. I still have much to learn, but I’ve mastered the basics.

    A customer sporting a MAF hat I made!

    Just when I thought I’d earned a break, he came home with another marketplace purchase: a used laser engraver. At first, I was furious. I had begged him to let me master the vinyl cutter before diving into anything else, but, of course, he had other plans.

    It took me days to set up the engraver—not to mention troubleshooting loose wires and other issues. Eventually, I figured it out, just as he knew I would. Though I’m still a bit annoyed about the outdated machine, it has opened my eyes to what I’m capable of. And yes, I’ve already told him that we’ll be upgrading to a newer model soon so I can really put it to good use.

    Enough about me—let’s talk about the amazing man who inspires me every day and what he’s been up to.

    About a month and a half ago, I noticed my husband revisiting an old passion from before I started chasing corporate dreams. Years ago, he served on the board of a museum in Waterloo. He was deeply invested in advocating for the east side of town, where we bought our first home. He worked tirelessly to make it a safe, thriving community for our son, but those ambitions were put on hold when my career took us to the Chicagoland area.

    This year, something reignited his passion for that museum. He began researching its current state and brainstorming ways to make an impact. Before I knew it, I was helping him design a website, create ads, and revive its social media presence. Together, we got it done, and we continue to make updates as needed.

    Since then, he’s reconnected with old contacts and forged new ones. His passion for saving this museum is unparalleled. He’s discovered that the museum faces significant challenges, including debt that risks the loss of the land previous board members worked so hard to secure. Despite the uphill battle—and a history of setbacks tied to the museum’s past—he’s fully committed to turning things around.

    He launched the “Save the African American Historical and Cultural Museum” campaign, got the board back together for regular meetings, and was nominated president. When vandalism damaged parts of the museum, he rallied the board to begin repairs, which are now underway. He’s spent countless hours researching artifacts, consulting with other local museums, and making connections. His determination is awe-inspiring, and it has consumed much of his time—so I’ve taken on more responsibilities at the farm to support him in any way I can.

    When my husband dreams, I know it’s time to grab our capes and dust them off—because when he’s all in, so am I.

    Moral of the story: Be so undeniably motivated that your glow inspires others. You never know when it might spark their fire. ❤️✌🏼 Jamie

  • Picture Perfect

    I have always been the kind of person who never quite fit in. It’s been that way for as long as I can remember. Don’t feel bad for me, though—this has quite literally shaped my success as an adult. While I had an extremely challenging childhood, I credit those difficulties with contributing to my growth and success as well.

    Even now, I still don’t fully fit in, and I’ve become increasingly aware of this as I grow into the “I don’t give a damn” phase of my life. I’ve decided to focus on doing what makes me happy and to inspire that same excitement in others who enter my space.

    Recently, I was assigned to a new project at work that has the potential to drain me completely and constantly challenges my work-life balance. Despite this, I do my best to maintain equilibrium because I’m a people person. I care far more about people than processes. I’m a motivator, capable of turning a piece of coal into a diamond. And I don’t believe in gatekeeping ideas.

    Sharing my ideas, however, has often been met with adversity. But instead of erasing when others color outside the lines, I ask if I can borrow a crayon and color alongside them. Afterward, I frame that artwork to share it with the world—even if people call it ugly. Here’s the thing I’ve learned: the ugliest things often have the most beautiful stories. So, I keep framing them, hanging them up, and telling those stories for the world to see.

    So, what does this have to do with owning a farm? Everything.

    The old Jamie would have stayed quiet, taken those same pictures, and stuffed them in a drawer somewhere, never to be seen again. But this farm has become my bigger picture. It’s my canvas, my story, and my proof that I’ve evolved. I no longer feel the need to prove anything to anyone because my motivators have shifted. My intentions for people are genuine—I’m no longer trying to be someone I’m not or impress others for the wrong reasons.

    Owning this farm has given me the freedom to become the best version of myself. It’s not about perfection; it’s about living authentically and building a life filled with purpose, passion, and connection.

    Moral of the story: If you’re facing adversity, it usually means you’re on the right track. Keep challenging the norm and hanging up those pictures.

    ♥️✌🏼

    – Jamie

  • Shift

    It’s been a minute since my last blog post, and wow, life got hectic—too hectic. My work-life balance took a nosedive, and honestly, it’s still a bit shaky. But lately, something’s shifting in my perspective, like a light finally breaking through the chaos that’s been at war in my mind.

    I’m realizing that the noise drowning out my thoughts is coming from the countless hours I pour into a career that no longer brings me meaning. I’m ending each day mentally exhausted, too drained to focus on what I truly love. I’ve spent so much energy motivating and inspiring others that I’ve been left running on empty. And, let’s be real—how defeating is that?

    But here’s the thing: I’m ready to fight for a change. I want to simplify, to find ways to quiet that noise and rediscover the passion that I once had.

    I’ve been saying to my husband over and over, “I just want to cash it all in and bet on myself.” Sounds crazy, right?! And, as always, he says, “I’ll support whatever you decide.” But the reality is—it’s not quite the right time. Still, I can’t help but wonder: are there other women out there, right around my age, feeling this same tug-of-war?

    Are we really meant to work ourselves to the bone until we hit our mid-60s, and then, finally, try to enjoy what’s left of life? I mean, how many of us are pouring everything into our careers—hitting mental exhaustion, stress levels through the roof, forgetting things as soon as we’re told? Are we sacrificing the now for some distant “someday”?

    Winter is tough for me. The slower pace, the stillness—it all means I’m moving around less, with way too much time to stew over things that don’t add value to my life. Somehow, the season seems to amplify all the thoughts I’d rather not dwell on.

    I’m leaning into this shift more and more. Instead of giving until there’s nothing left, I’m saving some of that energy for myself. I’ve started upskilling, diving into new things that will add value to the farm and strengthen me personally. Plus, my husband’s recent passion project—totally unrelated to the farm—has me dusting off my design skills, bringing a little of the “old me” back. It’s been refreshing to feel that spark again.

    I’ve come to realize that my mental health is worth so much more than any rung on the corporate ladder. The higher I climb, the clearer that truth becomes.

    Moral of the story… The best thing you can do is lean into the shift. You will often find that happiness has been waiting for you. ♥️✌🏼 Jamie

  • Girl On Fire

    Your girl is on fire but she is starting to get a little burnt…My body is telling me to slow down. My mind is in autopilot and I am forgetting things that I should be remembering. Waking up at 4AM and going to bed at midnight is catching up to me.

    The stress of our imperfect garden is weighing heavy on me along side a new project assigned to me at work. Trying to figure out how exactly I am going to hang on to this roller coaster ride without falling off. Doing all of this while trying to be a supportive wife, mother, aunt, sister, daughter, colleague, leader and friend. I have been burned out before but never felt like I didn’t have control like this time.

    So… how did I get here!? I continue to say yes of course I can or sure no problem. Can you relate? What I should be saying is no that’s not the direction I want to go in. Or appreciate you asking but I will have to respectfully decline. I have come to the realization that I am trying to be everything to everyone but me.

    Why is it that we put ourselves last? In order to help others you need to help yourself first.

    Burnout has caused my patience to wear very thin. Unfortunately, my husband becomes my emotional punching bag. I can also see that he is starting to fade a bit from burnout. Living this lifestyle is not easy and building a farm is one of the hardest things I have ever done. You never get a break. There is always something that needs to be done and if you don’t do it, it plain and simple won’t get done. You can’t put it off until tomorrow because something’s life may depend on it. Sound dramatic?? It’s not.. as I am writing this at 9PM on a Friday after my husband and I had a spat about absolutely nothing… it was so trivial.. I told him I could plant the rest of the cabbage and he insisted he do it. Thinking about it now, it was an unnecessary conversation. I am also mustering up the strength to put the chickens and ducks up so they are safe from predators during the evening hours.

    I also just worked a full day and then rushed out the door to sell at a market 25 minutes away that had a very minimal community turnout. As I was driving home I was thinking about all the time spent harvesting at 6AM only to have to bring a majority of it back home. This happens sometimes especially when it gets closer to school starting again. People get busy. I had to remind myself what matters are when people do show up you are there when they need you. I also enjoy going to market to see and interact with everyone. The world just feels a little lighter and more manageable to carry after a market.

    So what now? Well it’s time to take care of me and follow through on my commitments to my already spoken yeses. This means certain things I currently do will be paused not ended so I can gather myself again and rebuild the best version of me. This blog happens to be a pause. I had a great streak going! I posted every week since December 2023. I will be back with a newer version of me.

    Moral of the story… It’s time to put yourself first and if you don’t really know if you can find yourself these days… it’s time to go find her (or him).♥️✌🏼-Jamie

  • Boxes

    I have never been one to do well in confined spaces. I have also been the individual that stands out and not necessarily for all the great reasons.

    I have learned to speak up when things are not right or when I have something valuable to add to the conversation. I have also learned to not say anything if it’s just because I want to be heard. I am also the person who will start the conversation with a stranger when all the while it took every ounce of courage to speak.

    I tend to take this same approach with our farm adventures. I don’t stick within the confines of a box. My husband Ryan and I are partners in crime. But… not going to lie here.. sometimes I go rogue. I will give you an example. Our market garden has had some challenges this season and not having certain vegetables on our table or in our CSA shares drives me bonkers. We work so unbelievably hard to have a successful year and we are jumping hurdles left and right. Well.. I went rogue and planted extra zucchini plants in a completely different area of the property thinking Ryan will never know… well.. later he bounced the idea of planting melons, pumpkins and sunflowers in that very area.. I didn’t have the heart to tell him I went rogue so just went with it.

    Well fast forward 55 days later we have zucchini and watermelon just growing away all while the other zucchini plot is starting to come back strong. Ryan comes up to me and says man that watermelon plant looks like a zucchini plant.. I said yeah… yeah it does. He put his hand up in the air motioning for a high-five because we had zucchini for our CSA members due to me going rogue. Sometimes my crazy works out especially when I have someone who understands it.

    It’s those boxes that trip me up though. I do however realize I need some curbs otherwise my chaos starts to overflow and I run out of cups to fill. I have also found the more stress I have the less control I have over my urges to control my not so thought out ideas.

    This farm we are building is completely outside of the box. We were not given instructions by generations before us. We are the first generation..,it is just us navigating through what works and some of our ideas are downright unheard of but it works for us. The mountain of unfinished projects are constantly on replay in my mind along with the what ifs. We are not your typical farm or your typical farmers. I think sometimes that is our downfall but most times I think that is our greatest asset because we don’t get stuck in those boxes.

    This is another reason we decided to bring freeze dried candy to our farm table. We kept noticing the lack of young people at our markets and needed something on our table that would get the discussion going with kids coming to our table and maybe just maybe they will start asking about us and our farm and who knows maybe even grab a vegetable off the table♥️.

    I recently had an experience at a market that gave me an ah-ha moment. We have a couple of markets right after work hours and Ryan and I have discovered that dividing and conquering allows us to be two places at once. As I pulled up to our market I see a young man waiting for me to get setup, he loves the freeze dried candy! So.. I struck him a deal.. I told him if he helped me setup I would pay him in freeze dried candy. He of course took the deal. He gave me full effort and we talked about school and what he has been up to all summer. He completed his task and picked his candy out. I then heard him call his mother to tell her how he earned a bag of freeze dried candy. He later made his way back to the table and bought cucumbers. I realized that I needed to have an open seat at our farm table that everyone can sit comfortably in and encourage outside the box thinking of all ages.

    Moral of the story… Be different.. think different..Have the courage to speak up when necessary and listen in those moments when others are meant to shine. ♥️✌🏼-Jamie

  • The Content Creator

    I am far from giving myself the title of content creator.. Would I like to one day build a side hustle from it? Possibly..

    My husband started our YouTube channel when we lived in Colorado. He actually was into the homesteading scene before its popularity took off.

    It wasn’t until we moved back to Iowa when I actually got involved with it. I will say I got way too involved in the whole getting subscribers and likes. The YouTube goal of being monetized took over everything in my life. Ryan would constantly remind me that we are a farm who happens to have a YouTube channel and we were not going to fall in that trap of being a YouTube channel who happens to have a farm.

    I got too wrapped up into it. Ryan finally said enough is enough and we stepped all the way back from YouTube. I agreed it just wasn’t adding value. I then started to invest more time in Facebook and Instagram but that soon started to become the same thing except I had to work twice as hard to be seen for whatever reason.. I was also revamping our TikTok at the time.

    This is a great example on minimal return on full effort. 4 people liked this post of those 4 people I was one of them.. I didn’t sell any basil at the market either.

    What I realized was that TikTok loved us way more than Instagram or Facebook. So much time invested in all of these platforms all while working on building our dream here at the farm. I found it and still find it very difficult to do both and give all my efforts while working my full time career to pay the bills.

    I pretty much can do a short video in a matter of minutes or put together a post in under 5 minutes. The eye opening ah-ha moment came when I realized I am putting all this effort in posts that do not get seen much or after the fact. It also takes time away from my efforts here getting the farm ready. So.. I have stepped back a lot, I decided to focus on this very blog and our website but… I am not going to post about it like I did every Monday. If you are reading this it is because you either stumbled upon us by accident, searched us out♥️, or happened to see one of my many old blog posts. Either way thank you from the bottom of my heart for giving me a brief moment of your time. I have finally realized that I need to work on understanding how to become better at one thing at a time versus trying to be everything all at once. I have kind of approached life this way up until now and it is unbelievably stressful.

    No shade to the folks who post everyday I just find myself getting wrapped up in how many views and likes we got versus building my knowledge on how to make a strong foundation that will last on this farm. I would also get caught up in the algorithm on all platforms and before you know it 20 minutes of my life passed right on by that I can’t get back.

    So yes back to the basics for me figuring out how we can be the greatest versions of ourselves so one day we have the valuable content to share that gets the opportunity to be seen. Until that point you will see me gracefully bowing out.

    Moral of the story… Note to self.. Jamie put your phone down, be engaged in the conversation, ignore the notification, go find the best version of you. ♥️✌🏼- Jamie

  • Extreme Regret

    We bought a house that was built in five days… We had looked at so many small acreages and had a few deals fall through. We quite frankly were at our breaking point. We had seen the listing for the home we currently live in but we (meaning my husband) were not interested. It was too big, more money than we wanted to spend, and a little further away than we wanted to be. This listing landed back on our radar as our last deal fell through. We had no idea at the time this house was an Extreme Home Makeover build until the day we went to look at it.

    I remember walking into the home and immediately falling in love with the winding staircase. I also fell in love with the greenhouse. I had no idea how to garden or grow in a greenhouse I just loved the idea of it.

    Ryan, my husband wasn’t fully bought in. He is the more logical one out of us. I am the dreamer and often the unrealistic thinker. At this point we were house drunk and were just done. Ryan also knew that we left a house in Colorado that I loved. He wanted me to be happy in Iowa. He reluctantly agreed and we placed an offer that day, it was accepted the next day.

    I am starting to understand that saying hindsight is 20/20. What I have realized is that I was so worried about not having the big house, nice car, great clothes that I was missing out on what life really has to offer.

    Having the big house just means you have more to take care of and clean. It also means the 30+ windows that need replacing cost essentially the price of a small home in a neighboring community. Or the roof that needs replaced is equivalent in cost to two acres of land to purchase.

    Perspective is everything. I often get asked if we knew then what we know now would we buy this home. If I am being honest here.. it depends on the day. There are times especially this season which has been a challenging one with all of this rain and our garden flooding three times, our well flooding for the first time and stopped working along with not being able to open windows in the house because they have absolutely no screens which has forced us to buy a few windows at a time to install. The house has its quirks. The thing about this home is it’s all show and not very practical. Not really much storage space. This has caused us to really look at what we really need. I keep telling my husband we need to have an Extreme Garage Sale.. it’s wearing on him so maybe in the distant future a post will land on your socials about Mad Acre Farms selling everything to go simple..

    What I love about this property is what it has taught me and continues to teach me the much needed life lessons. Even on the hardest of days I get to be here living our dream of building a sustainable farm.

    I think I forget that sometimes, especially when things don’t necessarily go our way. It is actually quite ironic that I am saying this but it has also taught me that I do not need the big fancy things to be happy. If I could change the size of this home I would in a heartbeat. I would make it less than 1500 square feet which would be a reduction of over half the size. I would utilize the additional outside space for pollinator gardens or additional garden plots. I would also take all the money we would be saving in electrical cost and pump that right into the farm.

    So do I have regrets? Sure I do! My biggest regret is not having this thought process sooner in life. I don’t need fancy things to be happy. Matter of fact it’s the fancy things that cause the complications in my life. We are here to stay, even though somedays I tell my husband let’s sell it all, cash in our 401ks, find a piece of land out in the middle of nowhere and put up a tiny house and live our dream.

    Moral of the story…Fancy isn’t better, it’s just the shiny flashy wrapper containing very likely the same things the simple wrapper had in it. You may have just paid more for it.-✌🏼Jamie

  • The Farmhands Tale..

    Six… is the number of alarms I have set in the morning. I get up every weekday morning by 4:30 but my goal is 3… let’s just say that is why I have six alarms.

    The morning hours are my time. Time that allows me to reset my mental space and charge my inner “You Got This” button. I am being pretty vulnerable here but I often times struggle with my mental health especially when I get stressed or start to feel over overwhelmed. You know that saying check on your strong friends.,, It’s true.. I tend to put way too much on myself doing for everyone else and do not leave much for myself. It has gotten better for me since this farm came into my life. Definitely a beautiful distraction and gives me the courage to say no. What do I mean by that? I am a yes person… I will say yes even when I know it means I don’t have time but I squeeze it in often chipping away from the very little time I had dedicated for myself. The stress this puts on me is insane. The farm has given me the courage to say no without feeling guilty.

    My role here at the farm essentially is a full time farmhand. I work two jobs and by far my favorite is my farm job. I never really signed up for this gig it just kind of happened. I remember telling my husband that I didn’t want a major part in the decisions that go on with the farm, I am a leader in my corporate career and make decisions all day long.. I need an escape after hours.

    So.. what does a farmhand role look like here? I am basically the go getter or the plan do’er. Do you know how unbelievably hard it is to take instructions from your spouse and then… be able to take feedback without throat punching them!?

    My husband is fantastic at compartmentalizing his feelings. We could of just had a random blow up argument 5 minutes ago and then he can walk up to me whistling the tune of Don’t Worry Be Happy and ask me where his new expensive garden tool is that I can’t use because I break all of his cool tools.., I will admit sometimes, ok.. most times my inner child comes out and I will flip him the bird as I go grab his precious tool that he thinks he hid from me.

    In the summer time when we are not working our day jobs we are outside working on the farm. My husband is the type of person who has a list for everything. I will often get texts at random times of the day with things we need to get done and I am the reminder button. Every morning after chores are taken care of I start the list. The thing that I have realized is that the list continues to grow before I can cross off the previous task. I also realized that my husband changes his mind frequently and is a bigger dreamer than I ever really knew. This guy right here has a plan to conquer the world and then after he is done doing that he will jump right on to making a list of what’s next to text to me.

    This farmhand gig is the hardest job I have ever had mentally and physically but it is one of my favorites hands down. So if you ask me what I do here at the farm I will say a little bit of everything because I am the farmhand and pretty darn good at it too if you ask me!

    Moral of the story.. Find a job you would be willing to do for free. Then figure out a plan on how to make that your career. ♥️✌🏼- Jamie

  • Side Hustle

    I can’t honestly remember a time since my husband and I have been together where he didn’t start a little side hustle.

    Shortly after we first met he had started his record label Squadron Records ( he is totally going to get me for that one). He started that side hustle in college. I also remember I was there helping him design his first CD cover. He would get me side gigs designing other aspiring artists CD covers. At that time I was deep into the graphic design scene.

    That however, soon went to the back burner because we needed to focus on our little family we started. We ended picking up multiple jobs and switched our schooling to nights. We just didn’t have any time to keep that dream of his going.

    A few years after our son was born my husband started a vending company. This one he had started with our 5 year old son. They had candy vending machines across the Cedar Valley. He would take our son with him to fill the machines. This hustle fizzled out after time was stretching a little thin and profits just were not there. I at this point was not fully involved. Our son had taken on the partner role into the family side hustle business.

    Then there was one of my favorite side hustles my husband and son started by accident.. I remember coming home one Saturday afternoon from work to our house in Waterloo to see a line of kids outside of our house and my son and husband grinning from ear to ear. My husband had purchased a little cheap single serving snow cone maker with some simple syrup and our son setup a little table outside the house selling snow cones. These two even came up with a special add on called “Pucker Power”, it definitely fit its name and I got a chuckle hearing kids ask for it as a snow cone topper! This was the start of something pretty special. My husband and son decided to take this show on the road and created Arctic Snow. This was a family business and was something we did together as our son grew up. We had it going for a few years up until I accepted a job in Chicago. We had a mobile trailer that was one of Ryan’s first DIY projects. Man… I wish I knew then what I know now.. We sold everything so we could start this new adventure for my career.

    Now that I am looking back I realize that the side hustles stopped when we left home. Iowa was the spark. I just never realized it until recent.

    Now we are back home and down to what I see as our last and final side hustle. This time we are in it together with equal passion. The question is can we turn this side hustle into something full time?

    The side hustle I am referring to is Mad Acre Farms. This hustle hits a little different. We are putting everything we have into this to make something out of it. You could say we are obsessed. What I also find pretty ironic is that we are likely going to implement vending machines in to allow people to feed the animals here at the farm. We have also tossed around the idea of a podcast in the future. Now this isn’t no Squadron Records but it is a close as we may get! We have also discussed bringing back Arctic Snow to the property. Funny how things come full circle isn’t it!?

    Our life’s journey has lead us to where we are at today. Each adventure had a purpose in our life that would later resurface with the greatest potential.

    Moral of the story… Don’t be afraid to dream big because of the fear of failing. You will never know what your journey has in store for you if you don’t take the risk. ♥️✌🏼 -Jamie

  • 24/7

    My husband Ryan and I met in college and have been together since 2000. We were pretty much kids when we started our little family. There was a time where Ryan and I rotated shifts so we could take care of our son while working full time jobs to put food on the table. We also took turns on completing our bachelors degrees. We barely saw each other. This carried on as our careers progressed except I was the one on the road away from home a majority of the time.

    Fast forward to what seemed like a few short years, our son grew up and graduated high school and much like most kids he was ready to leave the nest. This was right in the middle of the pandemic. Everyone’s world was changing, I felt overwhelmed with my own turn of events and quite literally I felt like a fish out of water. My job that once had me traveling weekly was now turned virtual, our son was turning into an adult and I now had to live with the realization of my regretables. Not even sure if that is a word but once you get to know me you will soon realize you will need a Jamie dictionary.. On top of all of this, my very supportive husband was at a point where I needed to step up and show him the support he needed to pursue his passion very much like he did mine for the last twenty years.

    It was unbelievably scary to just let go. I realized at that time when my husband came to me for the last and final time about moving back home and buying a farm if I said no he was doing it without me. That was a pivotal decision in my life… the ol’ fork in the road if you will. Do I choose love and family over my career goals of reaching the top?

    It was actually an easy decision for me, I have no idea why.. Except it finally dawned on me that I spent a good portion of my life trying to prove my worth in my career while the people who valued me the most took a backseat to my time.

    I had no idea the impacts of that single decision of saying yes to the move would make on my life. I also didn’t think about the fact that my job was now virtual and… our son was taking the infamous leap of adulthood and living on his own.. this left Ryan and I in a very different space of learning life again with just us. Our life from 2020 to now has changed.. we were once maybe the couple who spent weekends together now turned into 24/7.

    I will admit it was nice to not have to travel, wait in airports, or stay in hotels wishing I were home. However, this newfound time together was a bit of an adjustment. What you may not know is that not only are we partners in crime with our farm ventures we also work for the same organization for our careers as virtual employees. We are together 24/7.. At first it was a bit of a challenge to not let the littlest things get to us but the farm gave us something to really focus on, it saved us on our worst days.

    We found a common interest in this farm and it was a beautiful distraction. The farm made our relationship stronger. Now.. don’t get me wrong we fight but now it’s about where and what we are planting or having a knock down drug out fight about seed spacing.. true story. The difference is those spats don’t last long and end up with one of us saying something to make the other person laugh and then we find a common ground and figure it out.

    Ryan is my best friend, my ride or die. He drives me insane sometimes but he knows me better than I know myself.

    Moral of the story.. Stop trying to prove your worth in a world that will likely replace you the same day. Invest your time with the people who already know your worth. -✌🏼Jamie

  • The Farmers Market

    You can learn a lot from a farmer’s market… and I mean a lot.

    We are starting our fourth season of market this year. We still have so much to learn but have picked up a few things along the way I would like to share with you.

    You can meet some pretty amazing people from the community along with some pretty exceptional vendors at these farmers markets. Going into our first season we didn’t know what to expect truly. Full transparency I wasn’t all that into it. I did it for Ryan. I will say though, after a few markets and seeing the involvement with the community and seeing the knowledge and passion the vendors had I quickly became hooked! It amazed me the passion that each vendor had in their skill. I suddenly wanted to know what that felt like. I was so engulfed in my career I didn’t realize that I never really had something of my own that I was passionate about and I needed to change that.

    I also noticed that some vendors come and go at the markets we attend but what I realized pretty quickly was that the markets all have the regulars. The regulars are the vendors we refer to as the OGs (Original Gangsters) these are the folks that show up year after year rain or shine. When they talk you listen, take notes and ask questions. Trust me they are dropping gold nuggets!

    These folks also are the ones who if they are veggie farmers will have crop a lot sooner than most. Trust me when I tell you this.. whatever you are thinking about trying they have already did it. They already figured it out and they are a wealth of knowledge. You can usually spot these vendors at any market because they already have a line before market starts. Get as close to these folks as you can and pick up those gold nuggets they drop. They do not mind sharing, at least all of our interactions have been very welcoming and we have built lasting friendships.

    Another thing I have noticed is that you can never predict what people will be looking for.. I remember one year we had a bumper crop of Nadapenos these are the non-spicy version of. Jalapeños. We couldn’t give them away that year.. Then next season we decided not to grow them. Guess what!? We had at least one person ask for them each market. You can’t predict what people will want but we have learned to grow the staples, tomatoes, squash, cucumbers,cabbage, peppers, green beans, leafy greens, onions, potatoes, and radishes, Then you can toss in a few surprises to see how they do!

    You also may have some customers that become your favorites. There are quite a few for us but I will say there is one particular couple that warms my heart when I see them. They are an elderly couple who have been together for many years and always walking around the market hand in hand. Ryan and I always smile when we see them. They are the definition of true love.

    There are also some mild stressors that come along with market. For us early on in the season it’s typically what in the world are we going to put on our table!? I find this the most difficult for us, no matter how early in the season we try to start something tends to come up and working full time careers it is difficult to find enough daylight to get everything done on time. Each year we get better and find new ways to figure it out.

    The other stressor is that some markets are a little more strict with the rules. Because of this we try to attend conferences in our off season to stay in the know. I do quite a bit of reading and research as well! We also have an occasional run in with the health inspector at our markets. I remember there was a rule brought up about our bagged greens and it just didn’t seem right to me because I follow other specialty crop growers in Iowa and they were selling their greens the same way we were so I called the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship. I met a really great inspector there and he educated me on what we can do. Turns out it was a misunderstanding that he helped get cleared up with the health inspector for me. Have the courage to respectfully pushback.

    I would like to leave you with this..Next time you hear about a farmers market taking place in your community do what you can to share it with others and show up. At the end of the day you are supporting the single mom who uses one of her days off to bake amazing creations in her kitchen while her daughter helps her sell at market. Or those newby veggie farmers trying to work two full time jobs and always fashionably late to market because they just got off work loading up what they can and got half way down the road and had to turn back because they forgot something! Show up for those folks, show up for the OGs, and the new vendors who were so unbelievably nervous the days prior to market but worked up every once of courage to come and literally lay their hearts out on their tables.

    Moral of the story.. Farmers Markets are the windows into your community. It is also a place where you may get the opportunity to see people put everything they love on display. Trust me.. if you look you will see it. ✌🏼-Jamie

  • You Signed Up For A Local Farm CSA (Vegetable Share) Now What!?

    Our CSA is about to begin here in July! I think about how customers can get the most out of our vegetables with not having to spend a ton of time. This thought crosses my mind often for our customers because we eat, sleep, and breathe the vegetable garden this time of year.

    Maybe you are a returning CSA customer, maybe you are brand new to this CSA thing, or trying another farms CSA program or maybe you are considering joining. Here are some ideas on ways you can get the most out of your CSA (vegetable share)!

    MEAL PREPPING IS KEY!

    Plan on getting leafy greens of sorts! There are so many ways you can use these veggies but the question is what is the best and quickest way?? If I could offer a suggestion I personally think meal prepping is very beneficial when belonging to a CSA. If you are like us you are always on the go! Give mason jar salads a try! You can incorporate quite a few of the veggies you get into these jar salads and be a quick meal prep! I did start a Pinterest board of some ideas to get you started! Just remember your greens are one of the last layers and your dressing is first!

    USE YOUR FARMS WEBSITE!

    Ask if your farm has a website! You likely already know that Mad Acre Farms does! I continue to work on it adding recipes and updating ways to navigate through it. We will offer recipe ideas and most importantly ways to store your veggies to get the most out of them! Don’t miss out on your farms website! They will likely have some gold nuggets in there for you! We will put links in our weekly emails to help guide you!

    QUICK PRESERVING TIPS!

    We will share ways to store for longer lasting vegetables. For example when tomatoes start to hit your share you may not have time to get to them right away just freeze them! I am still using tomatoes from last year’s harvest in our soups and casseroles as a base! Don’t worry I put some ideas together on how you can do that on our website! Also don’t forget about saving your radish tops and combining that with your basil to make a quick pesto! Then just freeze it in silicon ice trays, pop them out once frozen and store them in a freezer bag for later use!

    Learn more here!

    There are so many vegetables that you can freeze for later use it is amazing! We will be sure to let you know in our weekly emails ideas on quick ways to preserve!

    I have learned that flash freezing is your friend! This is when you cut up your vegetables and lay them flat on a pan and freeze them for 3-4 hrs then throw them in a ziplock back. I have made the mistake of not doing this and just throw them in a bag to freeze and it comes out as a big glob of vegetables!

    I am not huge on canning in the summer. It just takes a lot of time but.. in my off season I pick it up to learn more. The freezing method buys me time and allows me to can on my terms. I do however enjoy a nice dill pickle! Please don’t judge me on this next tip but I will buy those big club jars of pickles and save the brine. This season I will cut up my cucumbers and throw them into that brine. We also have some recipe ideas for your own pickles from scratch but if you are like me you just may not have time. Save your pickle juice! Cucumber season is fast approaching!

    There are so many herbs and vegetables you can dry or dehydrate. We provide ideas on ways to dry without buying a dehydrator or if you have one offer ideas for both. If you are not going to use those herbs in your share that week don’t worry we will give you some ideas on how to quickly preserve it for later! For example you can easily dry kale in your oven to make a kale powder to toss into your meals or incorporate into a smoothie. Don’t sleep on kale people that leafy green is a healthy powerhouse!

    I could go on for days on ways to make the most out of your vegetable share but at the end of the day you need to do what works for you. Just have a plan and I guarantee that you will maximize your CSA share!

    Moral of the story… Find your local farmer! Learn more about them through their socials, website, and the markets they attend. Interview them, and if they pass the test give their CSA a try! They are out there waiting for your support ♥️ – ✌🏼 Jamie

  • The Garden Made Me Do It…

    I finally understand why my mother spent most of her free time in the summer months coming home with loads of vegetable plants and flowers. The 5 kids would help her pull weeds but I never really gave the idea of gardening a chance.. I was always ready to be done before I even started. I missed out on some pretty great opportunities in the garden. If only I could turn back time..

    So here I am in my 40 somethings trying to figure out how to make the garden my career. Crazy right!? Not for me. Let me share with you a few things I have learned from this garden.

    In a world full of chaos and even on my noisiest of days the garden brings me silence and peace. I find myself walking the rows and looking up what that plant needs to grow to its fullest potential. Not even realizing the garden is doing the exact same thing to me. I recently saw a question being asked about growing leafy greens in Iowa during the summer. Most people responded to not bother. Us on the other hand do bother with it and figure out ways to grow sweet crunchy greens even on the hottest of days. The garden made us do it..

    The garden has been our metaphorical couch through those very uncomfortable therapy discussions. For some reason those deep discussions happen in the garden. The garden always has a way of keeping those heavy burdens and we always feel a little lighter walking away. The garden knows our deepest fears and the moments we hold so close to our hearts. It knows our secrets..

    The garden has taught us a little about time management and priorities over the years. We continue to adapt and learn there a so many ways to tend to a garden. Watering and pulling weeds by far are our most time sucking responsibilities. The garden has taught us to think outside the box to build efficiency. The last two years we added greenhouses. We are more intentional with watering which reduces weed growth. Don’t get me wrong we are still working on figuring out a better system but this garden forces us to be creative and prioritize our time more each year. This year was easier than the last. It just means we are growing in all different aspects of life.

    The garden has also taught me patience. This is a big one for me. I am the type of person who wants instant results and when I don’t see them I move on. I have yet to see instant results in the garden and find myself coming back to try again with any free time I can find. The garden brings me true happiness.

    The garden also pushes me outside of my comfort zone in the kitchen. I have taken a new approach with what I eat and find myself trying new recipes from the garden. I started to incorporate last year’s harvest that I freeze dried into our meals. Now I am far from a top chef but the garden has given me the courage to try and to try again.

    Moral of the story…Everybody deserves to find a space in the world that makes you forget about the chaos and silence the noise…Find your garden.

    ✌🏼Jamie

  • The Market Farm

    For us farmers market season is just beginning. We have found for our current schedule with our full time careers joining the later markets gives us more opportunities to have that much needed buffer to get our farm ready for the season.

    That doesn’t go without its own hurdles for us.. trust me when I tell you this every year we face new challenges! This year Mother Nature reminded us who was in charge with the continuous days of rain.

    Here at the farm we prepare for market in December. We do this by sitting down talking about the opportunities we had and what we learned from them along with what we are going to do differently for next season. Last season it was a cover crop fiasco. We both just didn’t educate ourselves enough on the proper process. This caused a delay in us joining market on time. So this season we elected to not do cover crop and conditioned the beds differently.

    We see value in learning from others in similar spaces. So we turn to organizations like Practical Farmers of Iowa. Where we meet like minded people who are running successful market farms. It is said that if you want to be amazing at something surround yourself with people who are doing what you love and are doing it better than you.

    We also were learning and are still learning greenhouse growing. This year using what we learned last year gave us the ability to have earlier crops. The problem we ran into this season already was timing.. we had an abundance of an early crop with minimal on farm customer traffic and the timing was too early for our markets. However, a positive note is that we did have some customer traffic where our website was used to find our current product and purchased, then picked up at the farm. To me even though foot traffic was limited it was a huge win because it showed us people are willing to travel for quality locally grown food. We just need to dial in consistency and variety and I need to have more courage to push our products more.

    Another topic we discussed in our off season was easier ways to provide a product to our customers on any given day without disruption from our day jobs while still providing flexibility to our customers. Is that even possible!? That is when we decided having a farmstand would be ideal here at the farm and meet those needs.

    We recently brought in a building to start working this plan into existence. We also are working on a mobile stand that goes hand in hand with our farmstand. This is a priority for us this season. We also will be working on building visibility into what is available at the stand at any given time. Yep.. still working on that idea through our website! We then took this a step further and got our farmstand qualified for the Farmers Market Nutrition Program. This means we can accept the Farmers Market WIC checks right here at the farm. The only stipulation is we need to be present when using, along with the stand being physically attended for two hours out of the week to be considered as a qualified farmstand. Absolutely worth it!

    For the sake of being transparent.. the biggest things for me at least with owning a market farm is the amount of directions you are pulled in. The farmstand is being placed at the top of our priority list right under the market garden. We also are committed to adding variety to the farm to bring in more customers. We are doing this by selling pasture raised poultry this season as well. That is for another blog!

    I often wonder if we were in a more convenient location would we get more on farm sales.. then I realize that people are willing to travel for quality. We just need to step up our game this season to make it happen and bring consistency and options.

    It amazes me each year what this market farm teaches us. I am finishing this blog after Ryan and I worked day and night on this garden. We didn’t want to stop but our bodies said enough is enough. This farm is our passion, our diamond in the rough.

    Moral of the story… If it were easy everyone would do it.. That statement becomes so evidently clear when you find something you believe in that pushes you so far out of your comfort zone it isn’t even funny. I hope you have found your passion and if you haven’t look outside your comfort zone I can almost guarantee it’s in plain sight waiting for you. ♥️✌🏼-Jamie

  • Staycation

    For the last two years Ryan and I take two weeks off from our careers. It’s a vacation from our corporate commitments. We don’t go anywhere fancy, we stay right here at the farm. We refer to it as our staycation. However, we work day and night getting everything ready on the farm. We work so hard that we quite literally crawl into the house after it gets so dark we can no longer see…our bodies are unbelievably exhausted. Even with that being said, this time of year is when we feel the most alive.

    This is our time to not only to unwind but live in the moment of our dream job. The entire goal is to assure the market garden is up and running. Once that is complete we jump onto the next highest priority project.

    We are on season four of Keeping Up With Mad Acre Farms. The first year I admittedly wasn’t fully bought in. Ryan was doing everything on his own. I helped but I honestly wasn’t giving him my full effort. I only remember taking just a few short days off that first year. The end of that season is when everything changed for me. 2021 was my pivotal year that my entire perspective on life changed along with my priorities.

    The next year was me finding myself again.. Poor Ryan didn’t stand a chance with keeping my feet on the ground. I went buck wild in the garden world. I wanted to try to grow everything. I knew absolutely nothing about gardening but I didn’t care I was in deep. That year I took one week of staycation to help with the market garden. I was so focused on the shiny things of the garden world that I stepped over the basics all while pulling Ryan through it with me. I was hurricane Jamie in his world that season. Looking back he was so supportive of me it was insane. We tackled so many new things that year. It was a true testament of what our super power was.. it was us working as a team. That year we added an additional market and was our first year doing pasture raised poultry. It was a successful year in so many ways.

    The next season I decided it was time to take a leap and request a two week staycation from my corporate career. The anxiety that came over me from being gone that long took over me.. I had a tough time pulling away but Ryan and the farm needed me. This year was a rough start due to a cover crop gone wrong. We spent the entire time working on our market garden. This was a big year for us because we had our first CSA member. It meant someone believed in what we were doing, they believed in our farm so much they committed to our product. The pressure to be better than the last year was so unbelievably heavy. That year we also ended up losing over half of our chicken flock to a mink. We made the decision to not do pasture raised poultry because we knew the risk. That issue alone was such a distraction. This was a monumental year just reminding us that we are stronger than anything thrown our way.

    Now here we are season four. We have two greenhouses in production already and are on a two week staycation. I am not as anxious as years past. I have learned that corporate America will run the same way it did before me and will run just fine when I am not there. This farm however needs us. We are the engine that powers it. So yes we will put everything we got into making the market garden a success this year even with the rain setbacks and delays we are so much further ahead than the last season and the season before that.

    The Greenhouse Project

    Then once we wrap up the market garden we will be jumping into getting the pasture ready for the bringing back of the pasture raised poultry along with assuring our farm security is ready to take on his role in farm leadership. A very vital part of our farms success this season.

    I could go on for days on the things we got going on at the farm this season. We have slowed down a bit on our socials to focus on the farm and assuring a successful season for our CSA members and farm customers. Don’t worry we will pick back up with updates very soon!

    We continue to grow our skills from lessons learned. By far our staycation is the best vacation we take nowadays. I have discovered I no longer need fancy trips or getaways. I could get lost in this farm for days on end. Time goes by way too fast.. I am going to enjoy every minute of it.

    Moral of the story.. Find something you love that makes you feel more alive than you have ever felt. You usually know if you found it if it scares the hell out of you, but you keep chasing it because the thought of losing it is even more terrifying. ✌🏼-Jamie

  • The Vegetable Farmer

    Just a small town girl with nothing to lose and everything to gain. That was my mindset as I entered early adulthood. That mindset got me to where I am at today. I remember feeling stuck and scared that I was going to be put in a box. A box that capped my highest potential and I blamed that on the environment I grew up in.

    I blamed Iowa…I blamed Iowa for the constant reminder of not having much as a kid . The tap on the shoulder that wouldn’t let me move on from the life I grew up around surrounded by what seemed to be the never ending cycle of financial hardship. Let’s be honest here if you know what it is like to barely make ends meet and then you happen to run into some luck every once in a while… that luck doesn’t last long at all. Most of the time that luck is equated to dollar bills and you blow it as fast as you can get it. That was the environment I was accustomed to. So as a young adult I was suffocating from the thoughts of following in those same footsteps… so I left Iowa.

    I uprooted my family on pure faith. A little history about us was that we bought our first home on the east side of Waterloo. Ryan loved that house. It was the first house we made a home. We had amazing neighbors who quickly became like family to us. I remember the day I left our first home and vowed never to look back. I left by myself to start a new life in the Chicagoland area. All while Ryan finished packing up our old life so I could get a jump start on our new life. This was how things went for us for 8 years. Moving to states where we were the closest family we had. Man.. I thought I was the risk taker in the relationship… what took me a long time to realize was it was my husband and son who held the highest stakes. They bet everything on me.. literally.

    The move back to Iowa wasn’t my idea. I quite honestly was against it.. I realize now it was out of fear of being put back into that same box. But life for me is always about bets and risks. I grew up around bets and risks so that only makes sense except this time I felt I had everything to lose. Deep within I knew it was time I bet on my family.

    Iowa welcomed us back with open arms. I just wasn’t prepared for what Iowa had in store for us. It changed me…

    Iowa woke me up from what I believed was the best I could do. It continues to show me there is so much more to life. I just can’t believe it came in the form of a vegetable garden.

    Less than 5 years ago I wanted to climb the corporate ladder. The goal was to reach the highest rung on the ladder I could. Now.. I realize life’s truest potential isn’t about boardrooms and corporate engagement meetings. It’s about finding complete happiness and holding on to it.

    This farm has taught me so much about myself in such a short period of time. This isn’t a phase.. I understand now why they say farmers are some of the happiest people alive. It’s because they figured out that life doesn’t have to be over complicated. Life is best lived when you silence the noise of chaos and choose simple.

    So yeah.. I would risk it all to be a vegetable farmer. It is abundantly clear on exactly what I need to do these days.

    Moral of the story… Sometimes those boxes we find ourselves put in are the boxes we packed ourselves. It’s time to unpack. -✌🏼Jamie

  • Surface Level

    Farming is definitely not my second language and I don’t claim it to be..at least not yet. Farming is however an unexpected passion that I get to share with people I love.

    When I tell you I have a lot to learn … I truly am like a child growing up again learning a completely different view on life.

    I remember a couple of seasons ago Ryan had purchased strawberry roots to plant for hanging baskets. People… you would have thought we won the lottery! I was obsessed with the idea of having strawberries growing out of baskets hanging up everywhere around the farm. What I realized was I was so obsessed with the idea of it that I didn’t actually educate myself on how to make it happen. It was so surface level for me. I even made a video that showed how I clearly planted them incorrectly. I unintentionally was suffering from the insecurities of me not being an expert but trying to prove to everyone even myself that I knew what I was doing..

    I of course discovered I planted them incorrectly and fixed some of them. I did however still have them planted incorrectly and didn’t care for them the way I should have and they didn’t grow well.

    What I should have done was find a hanging basket that was at least 12-14 inches in diameter. Fill it with some good planting soil/compost mix, peat-free if possible because strawberries do not like to sit in water. Then dash it with some blood/bone meal to provide a boost. Doing all of this while my strawberry roots were soaking for 4-6 hours.

    Then… plant them root side down, with the crown of the strawberry sticking out of the dirt! See the last time, I planted it sideways and on top of that I buried the poor thing and it either didn’t grow or was slow to grow. Then I would consistently water every 1-2 days. Some people might ask why not just get strawberry plant starts to use instead? Have you seen the price of those things! Why not get a bag of 25 roots for $15-$20 vs one plant for $5 or an already established hanging basket for $20. That was and still is our rationale.

    Much like my strawberry story I have approached life at times from a very surface level perspective.. Life can be so much more than that.

    Is there something in your life that maybe you have not put in forth the effort to make it successful because it may require the idea of facing a fear of failure or having to admit you are not an expert? Or what about having to take extra time to learn more about something you are not an expert on before jumping head first into the pit of the unknowns.

    What I have discovered is I needed to fail fast and fail often because that for me creates growth on so many levels and humility. It also gives me insight to realize what truly makes me happy even if I am not great at it I continue to try. It’s the reassurance that I am on the right path.

    I still posted that strawberry video.. I was humble about my mistake. I also later realized that I still did it wrong. So this year I am going to try again just for me and be okay with failure if it happens again.

    One of these days you are going to stumble on a blog from a woman who finally figured out that life isn’t just surface level. That sometimes you have to dig a little deeper to find your own gold. She will be surrounded by hanging baskets of strawberries in abundance. Until then she is going to keep digging and sharing her gold as she discovers it.

    Moral of the story… Failure is brutal sometimes.. Can you imagine a life where you always win? Those are lives of comfort zones. Here’s to failing fast and failing often. It’s time to be uncomfortable.-✌🏼Jamie

  • 2 Week Notice

    How epic would that be if you were reading my official two week notice right at this very moment.. Would you think to yourself good for her or maybe even think about your current situation and contemplating the same?

    For the record this is not my official notice. At least not yet. Don’t get me wrong chucking up the ✌🏼to corporate America is a goal that I don’t mind letting people know about.

    The Powerball was at a billion dollars not too long ago. I told my team that if I won to not judge me but I would not be giving a notice. I would however make it up to them by paying off their houses and cars so they could focus more on what makes them happy vs working to pay off debt.

    Ryan and I of course talked about what we would do if we won. It wouldn’t be taking lavish trips or buying fancy things. It would quite honestly be just building on to what we currently have after we bless people in our lives. We would be the type of folks where we would not speak about it but there definitely would be signs here at the farm. Things would get done a little quicker around here!

    That truly got me thinking… if that is what it took for me not to give any notice. What would it take for me to give a two week notice. The truth is… I started to look at more than just my career. What am I hanging on to that is holding us back from achieving more happiness that I can give a notice to?

    I started to apply this mindset to everything. I look at the two week notice as a form of giving myself grace while I change the way I look at things.

    For example, it is unbelievably difficult sometimes for me not to always take lead. I came from a very strong woman that showed me if you want it done right do it yourself. What I have discovered is all that really means is, that if you want it done your way do it yourself. I found that when I stepped back and let others do the same task their way the task still gets done. In some circumstances it gets done better. I also found that it brings forth growth. I am knocking down this mindset one notice at a time.

    Working full time during the day and then immediately jumping into the farm at night can sometimes be a little challenging for me to switch gears to not having to take lead on everything and letting my husband take the rope. He is the one who has really put in the research on this master plan of ours!

    Think about that for a moment. Is your dynamic with your significant other something where there are certain things you each take lead on? Have you had a situation where you both took lead? We have that a lot and what I find out is the rope is too short and we both have to take steps back in order to have enough vs holding the rope while the other one ties it and we keep moving forward together.

    It is a daily struggle for me. The pandemic changed a lot of our dynamics. Before we had quite a bit of space between us. Nowadays we don’t go a day apart. We had to learn how to work better as a team. We learned that very quickly at this farm. Things get extremely difficult if we are moving in the opposite direction.

    We are both very strong and stubborn individuals and most of the time it’s me just not wanting to let go of that leadership mentality. I am constantly working on shifting that mindset. From a control freaks perspective it is so unbelievably hard.. I am that person sitting in the passenger seat saying the light is green… or there is a car coming 😊. Do you know someone like that? Is that person you?

    I think for me when I make incremental shifts of letting go life gets a little easier. When I find myself reverting back to that space I take a moment to reset, show myself grace, and then try again. A lot of self coaching going on inside of this head of mine. That’s why giving certain mindsets that feed on stress and anxiety a two week notice has become my priority.

    Moral of the story… It’s time to give a 2 week notice on whatever is holding you back – ✌🏼 Jamie

  • Gravel Roads

    There is a lot you can learn from gravel roads… I mean a lot..Did you know that roughly 60% of Iowa’s public roads are gravel? How often do you hear someone say they don’t take gravel? Think about that for a minute. That means that they have a 60% chance of missing out on some great treasures that happen to be placed on one of those very gravel roads.

    Our farm happens to be off a gravel road. There is actually no way you can get to our farm unless you take gravel. Now there are routes that offer you less gravel travel but in some way you will have to take gravel to get to the farm.

    I use to be one of those people that if I could avoid a gravel road I would. I just never realized what I was missing until I came back home to Iowa. These Iowa gravel roads have taught me quite a bit in just our short time being back home.

    I have learned that when a road sign states unmaintained you definitely do not want to take that road after a heavy rain or snow storm.. I have heard stories about those unmaintained roads where I will not mention any names but are often the locals to the rescue with their tractors pulling out the brave souls from their mistakes of taking a path less traveled… literally..

    The consequence of taking that path is having to call your spouse or parents to let them know of the poor decision you made but not to worry because the locals of these gravel roads are amazing human beings with a sense of humor saved you the cost of an expensive tow bill and got you out of the sticky situation you put yourself in. For the record… I have not made that mistake yet. However, it is likely coming because I am one of those individuals who often times is up for the challenge.

    But don’t worry here at the farm you got some options, there is a route right off a paved road that leads directly to our farm with about a mile of gravel on a maintained road. See what I did there 😁.

    http://wwe.madacrefarms.com

    I have also learned on these gravel roads that when someone drives by you wave regardless who they are or if they waved back or not. I literally will wave at everyone and feel bad if I don’t now. I can’t make this up. It has now been instilled in me that you wave at absolutely everyone. It has become such a habit now that I find myself waving at people on the paved roads and highways and at times will get puzzled looks! I don’t mind at all, and realize that the wave represents acknowledgement. I often say to myself as I wave to anyone that drives by I truly hope they are having a good day and say a little prayer asking they be lifted up. I have those kind of days myself and could only hope someone takes a brief moment in time to ask the same.

    In the spring these gravel roads become like an expressway of semis and tractors. This is how the community makes a living and puts the very food on your plate. I have a new found respect and have learned to have patience for these vehicles. I will move over a little extra on the road paved or gravel to wait for them to pass by. I will give a little space between us so they can see I am behind them and wait to pass until I know it is safe. These folks spend a lot of time on these gravel roads to assure they can provide the resources they have committed to for the year and it is the least I can do to have a little patience and give a friendly wave as they pass by.

    Another thing I have found is that these gravel roads lead to some pretty cool small towns. For example we live next to a small town in Iowa by the name of Lincoln. There is a paved road to Lincoln and the history runs deep. The population of this town is under 200 people. There is a sign that says Lincoln next 5 exits. It basically covers all the roads in this little town and I absolutely love that sign as it makes me smile every time I see it! 👇

    This small town also has a post office that I have learned a lot visiting it every so often. One thing that I have recently learned is that we need to get a better quality rain gauge because you may be asked how much rain you got and if you were like me I didn’t have a clue.

    I have always been so use to going into places and not saying anything to anyone and just handling my affairs. Never looking up or acknowledging people, just living the day to day. Boy… was I missing out. It is still a learning process for me to pause and live life a bit and take a moment to talk about the weather or talk about how much rain we got out at the farm and hear about how the postmaster is preserving her eggs she got from the farm and utilizing the comfrey we shared with her. Living here has taught me that it is okay to slow down, it has actually provided me a little more clarity on what is important in life.

    This small town also has a little bar tucked away by the name of Larry’s that has some pretty great pizza that we were introduced to by one of our neighbors. Like most people we may have never knew about this place if we were not told by the locals. If you haven’t heard of this little joint I would recommend you make a point to stop by. You would be supporting local and likely hear some history about the little town while you wait for your pizza. You also would have the chance to take a photo of the road sign I was talking about and post it on your socials, which of course gives the ability to put this little treasure on the map and make for a great story!

    We get the privilege of living among some pretty amazing people who are the absolute treasures of rural Iowa. I have never met a group of people who are so humble and caring and it is truly genuine. We have lived in different parts of the country and have been blessed with great people in our lives but the amount of support that we have received coming back home from the locals has been such a blessing. These amazing people have taught us a few things about rural Iowa.

    I could go on for days about these gravel roads… so much I have learned and so much left to still learn. What I do know is that if you are not willing to travel somewhere because there is a gravel road you have a 60% chance of missing out on what Iowa really has to offer.

    Moral of the story… take the gravel road. We did and it was the best thing we have ever done.

    -✌🏼Jamie

  • From Scratch

    Here is what I know.. Life at times can be extremely challenging, the easy way is not always the best way, money doesn’t buy happiness, and for me ambition to climb a corporate ladder means spending more time away from family. Ironically enough defeating the entire purpose of the goal of providing a better life for my family when all it really would have taken was more focus on things that made us truly happy and made it a little less complicated which actually happened to be more time together. Crazy right!?

    By far one of my biggest regrets was not realizing it sooner. I watched our son grow up in photos because I traveled so much for work.

    Here we are 20 years later finally figuring out what is important. We have taken the lessons we have learned along the way and dumped them back into this big bowl of life and now rebuilding a very simple happiness. We are very much starting from scratch.

    If you ask us what happiness looks like 100% hands down we would tell you we live for our nights and weekends. That is our free time to take action on our dreams. If only we would have lived a little more simpler and acquired less debt we could be spending all of our time fueling the fire of our dreams every day instead of just nights and weekends. Another life lesson.

    Turning this Extreme Home Makeover house into an agritourism destination is the priority. We have spent the last three and a half years cleaning up the property. The progress is slow because in order to fuel our dreams our corporate careers are necessary. At least for a little while longer. It is discouraging some times because we feel we should be so much further along. It takes time and these days a lot of money. Remember debt free zone over here! That’s another priority for us and the farm. So if that means holding off or making adjustments to the goal to keep the purpose at the front of the line, that’s exactly what we will do. We don’t mind being intentionally broke if it means we are a step closer to reaching our goals.

    Let’s unpack that a bit. In order for the farm to be sustainable it has to bring in an income. It also requires much of our free time to make that happen. That is why we carved out a space for our market garden, created a CSA, attend farmers markets and coming soon we will offer a farm stand right here on the farm. So this means starting seeds in the winter to prepare for spring. Prepping our garden for the season in early spring, creating a season extension so we can grow earlier and later in the season by adding greenhouses to the property, installing those greenhouses for the very first time, growing in them and taking all of these lessons and putting them back in the bowl to create a better garden recipe for the next season. Oh! And share all of this on our social pages when we can in efforts to keep our supporters in the loop and build excitement about what’s to come on the farm.

    With building sustainability in mind we also know we need to create some form of passive income on the farm. So we stepped way out of our comfort zone…and bought a project to build a shepherd’s hut. We also know the amount of time that project takes so we jumped on another deal on a mostly completed Tiny House. We are now working on creating an inviting space on the property for it to reside along with working on making it a comfortable stay with amenities using all solar energy. This will be our future Air BnB. Eventually we will do the same with the shepherds hut.

    We also understand the importance of bringing people to the property and being able to build a beautiful space where people will enjoy the scenery and want to come back because of the way it made them feel. This is why we are working on things here at the farm like the Wildflower project. We have been actively working on building micro environments for beneficial insects along with our bees by planting native wildflowers. We have been working on this space now for three years. It took quite a bit of cleaning up. This is such an undertaking considering the land it is being planted on just wasn’t taken care of for years. It will be beautiful once we perfect it and a great backdrop for the Tiny House.

    Another venture we undertook here at the farm was something that really helped bring in an income for the farm. This was our pasture raised poultry. We didn’t do this last season due to predator pressures we experienced. We added additional farm security with bringing in a livestock guardian dog. He is still in a very much puppy mentality but starting to get an understanding of the job.

    This is why we decided we will be offering pasture raised poultry on the farm again this season. We planted a pasture for our birds that we will graze them in mid to late summer. This took some time.. a lot of time but we learned along the way what we need to raise a healthy, happy bird.

    The season before last Ryan and I did close to 200 birds on the farm with just the two of us. That season was probably the hardest I have ever worked in my life raising them while maintaining the garden, preparing for market, working our corporate careers, then getting the birds ready for our customers. Even with all of that.. it was worth it. That is why we are bringing it back.

    http://www.madacrefarms.com

    We also know the importance of sharing our farm with others and bringing in the community to experience the current happenings. With all of this being said, we have been blessed this year with organizations reaching out to do farm tours and most recently asking if we can host an event.

    The pressure we have put on ourselves to be better than we were last year is insane. Heck the pressure to be better than yesterday is our mantra. What I have realized is that in order to find happiness we needed to live through these experiences and have the courage to mix it back into to life when we knew we could do so much better. We are determined to leave our mark on this world and won’t stop until we accomplish extraordinary.

    This is going to be a better season than the last! We took last year’s lessons and mixed those back in. We hope you pull up a seat at our table to enjoy what we have to offer, trust me there is a seat for everyone. Nothing wrong with starting from scratch or should I say experience.

    http://www.madacrefarms.com

    Moral of the story… Starting from scratch is scary, especially when you may be half way through the recipe but was it ever really your recipe?? Have the courage to make your own♥️

    -✌🏼Jamie

  • The Local Diet

    There is nothing more intimidating than to walk up to a farmer’s market table and have no idea what half the produce on the table is let alone how to cook it. At least for me…

    Maybe you can relate in some shape or form. I have really done some digging deep down lately on how can I implement more whole foods in my diet that were locally sourced. If I am being honest here I haven’t felt the greatest physically and my stress levels have been a little high…on top of that, I am a stress eater. Not going to sugar coat it.. your girl can smash a row of Oreos in under 5 minutes.

    I started to realize that I have the ability to grow what I need but still choose convenience. It is crazy if you think about it.. we as humans are sometimes very particular about the brand of clothes we wear, the kind of cars we drive but don’t think twice about running through a drive through because it’s more convenient let alone the thought of what’s in the food goes out the window.

    This market season I am challenging myself to cut down my refined sugar and pick up a healthier option and find quick ways to incorporate whole foods into my diet. I am getting a jump on my lifestyle change by cutting down my sugar intake. This is one of my highest priorities right now.

    I no longer have sugar in my coffee, this was a brutal change for me. I was also drinking a ton of soda and eating lots of sweets because I told myself I deserved them because of a stressful day.

    What I am starting to notice is that not having these things in my diet I am getting better sleep, I don’t feel so tired all the time, my skin is starting to look healthier and I just all around feel better. Can you imagine if I take this a step further and start planning meals around what is on a farmers market table or what we can provide right here at the farm!?

    The thought of how am I going to have time to really make this work into our lifestyle crosses my mind often. I have started to slowly implement ways to cut out the junk and replace it with something healthier and not time consuming. I do this while looking up meal prep ideas along with juicing recipes.

    Last season I bought a Hamilton Beach Juicer for $69 on Amazon. I have not even scratched the surface of the things I can make.. maybe a juicer is not currently in the budget for you but consider if you are a coffee or soda drinker I would be willing to bet you could save for two weeks and not purchase those items as much and have more than enough to purchase a decent juicer.

    Last year we had an abundance of eggplant and pears from the farm . I juiced those together. You may be turning your nose up to that right now and I don’t blame you.. I probably would have too! It actually tasted pretty good and the unbelievable health benefits eggplants bring to the table is insane. Such an underrated vegetable. It actually is great for weight loss! I also have a few carrot juicing recipes that I am wanting to try this season as well to up my Whole Foods game!

    Recipes here!

    Let’s talk about some meal prep ideas! I am going to try the mason jar meal prep this season with all of our leafy greens and what ever we bring home from market will go into those. If I can preserve it I will! Kale is on my radar to turn into a powder that I can use all year long. I put a recipe on our website that shows how to do this!

    Click here to learn how!

    I am on a mission not only to eat locally grown food but to inspire others to do the same. Get outside of your comfort zones and go to your local farmers markets with a plan. If you are new to the market scene and nervous come see me I got you and if we don’t have what you need we promote other farmers who do!

    Taking this a step further, find your local farmer! Not only can you change the way you feel with implementing whole foods in your diet you can help a local farmer continue to provide those great options on your table and keep your dollars local. Building relationships with your local farmers is so unbelievably important. Especially when it means you know where your food comes from and how it was grown.

    I of course won’t go 100% without sugar. I mean I am motivated but not crazy 😜. My splurge day will be me supporting local. Meaning the bakers at the markets and of course the local coffee shops! I won’t splurge unless it’s local. I have already started to carry this approach ♥️

    Moral of the story.. Find your local farmers♥️

    -✌🏼Jamie

  • What You May Not Know About The Farmer’s Market

    Farmers Market season is fast approaching! We absolutely love market season. If I am being honest here it isn’t because we bring in a ton of income.. full transparency if we really wanted to get down to the facts with what it takes to grow the produce, harvest it, and then package it we are probably less than $5/hr. This also doesn’t include the travel time to sell at the market or the time we spend at the market. So in other words we don’t do it because we are getting rich off of it.. we do it because it provides us purpose and joy.

    Please keep that in mind when you are scrolling on your socials and see there is a post about a local farmers market. Engage in that post, give it a like, a share and tag a friend. Ultimately what you are endorsing is supporting your small farmers, bakers, and crafters who found their purpose. These folks likely gave up their nights and weekends to provide a product they believe in at your local market.

    What you also may not realize are the groups of people who take time to organize the market spending countless hours creating social posts, recruiting new vendors, brainstorming activities to draw a crowd so they can build something positive for their community while trying to promote foot traffic within the local area. There are times where these market committees are not vendors which means they are community members who are dedicating unpaid time to create something positive for families to enjoy because they see the value in having these types of community building events.

    I never really thought about any of this until we became vendors. I then started to see the passion that runs through these markets to make them a success. I have also seen the disappointment in everyone when the anticipated turnout just didn’t happen. What I have learned is the market is only as strong as its community support.

    At the smaller markets we attend I will say we don’t see a lot of young adults. I often wonder if it’s just timing or if there is a way to get young adults to stop out. I also wonder if people pass their local market to go to a bigger market? Maybe not realizing that with their support they could turn their small town market into a popular place and keep their community dollars local. People will take time to drive if they feel the value is worth the effort. That was an ah-ha moment for me… what can Mad Acre Farms do to help support our local markets right!? What can we do to promote farm foot traffic? At that moment I realized we need to up our game and selling produce may not bring in the crowd but how we sell produce and the experience you get when you come to our table or farm could change that.

    Let me leave you with this.. a typical work week market day for us looks like this.

    The day prior before our corporate careers begin in the morning we walk the garden and determine what we are going to take. The next day we wake up early to get a jump on harvest. We have multiple markets and if it falls on a work day we are working twice as hard to get harvest done before our corporate careers start. During the end of the work day we are multitasking loading the vehicle with our freshly picked produce. I of course find myself after hours while loading our truck taking work calls. Once the truck is loaded we take care of the farm.. fresh water and feeding time. By this time we are at go time. We hustle to the market 5 minutes before the whistle blows and a very loyal vendor who we now call family without hesitation rushes to help us get setup. Sometimes we beat that whistle and sometimes we don’t… Talk about anxiety for me when we don’t…

    The moments we don’t make the whistle are the times where I wonder if we are just crazy for even trying.. Then it happens, like clockwork, we have amazing supportive people waiting patiently for us from the community. If only they knew our hearts are racing out of our chests and we just finished up a stressful day at work but that all goes away when we get our first customer purchasing that freshly picked produce from our table! It’s just a friendly reminder to us of the why and a gentle nudge that gives us a sense of purpose♥️

    Want to make an impact on your community? Check out your local farmers market.. even if you think it may not be for you. Trust me you will never know if you don’t go! If you are a farmers market supporter already, thank you it means the world to us!

    Moral of the story… This is an easy one.. support local ♥️

    ✌🏼-Jamie

  • He Does The Cooking

    Give credit where credit is due. I will be the first to admit cooking is not one of my best talents. Ryan does the majority of the cooking in our house. Trust me it is for both of our safety.

    To be honest I was and have always been a little rough around the edges and a little more tomboy like. I am also in a career that is predominantly a male environment. Maybe this ties into how I grew up. If I could place any blame here… I blame my three brothers. Where ever they were I was with them. Catching tadpoles, snapping turtles or even peeing on electric fences, don’t worry I didn’t do that but was right there when it happened rolling on the dirty ground laughing hysterically with my brothers… a story for another day.

    However, the super hero in my story growing up will always be my mother. She still to this day is the strongest woman I know. As a child I don’t have many memories of cooking but the memories I do have are the multiple jobs she had at one time so she could put food on the table. I remember her coming home throwing something together for all of us and then heading to her next job. That was her super power. Making it work.

    I am not sure how she did it but she would always find time to make us feel special on our birthdays and make us our favorite meal. Mine always was acorn squash. I don’t know what it was about the way my mother cooked it but I couldn’t duplicate it. The recipe is very basic with just butter and brown sugar. I tried for years to make it taste the way she made it.. I finally realized it wasn’t the recipe that made it taste so amazing.. it was the way it made me feel.

    I now look back and wish I would have taken more interest in learning the skill and yes it is a fantastic skill to have. I am now in my 40 something’s starting at the very basics. I feel cooking requires an unbelievable amount of discipline and patience.. Two things that challenge me to this day. If I am not great at something I find a way to self sabotage and pump myself up on how it’s not going to work out and only give it a fraction of my effort. And… guess what happens.. it of course doesn’t turn out.

    I am also the individual in the family dedicated to bringing the eating utensils at any family gathering instead of a dish. Everyone knows my cooking abilities.

    Stepping into this farm world and this life of homesteading I realize the importance of utilizing what you have to its fullest ability. That means learning how to cook the food we grow and having the ability to share that with others. I also think there is a balance for a person like me as well. Meaning I don’t necessarily love the kitchen because it doesn’t love me. I would much rather be outside playing in the dirt. Why can’t I have both!? And.. be great at them?

    After a bit of self reflection I have discovered that I can in fact have both. I just need to put in the work up front and make time. However, time these days for anyone is so precious. I would imagine that most can relate to not having enough time to cook if you have a full household of activities or maybe over demanding jobs/careers that you give everything you got and have nothing left at the end of the day. Trust me I can relate in so many ways…

    I have started to realize that if I slow down for just a few seconds I can find time to make quick meals with what we have and still have time to do the things I enjoy more. Now I am not great yet at cooking.. did you catch the word yet!? It was because I was focusing on the wrong meals that didn’t work for me and my lifestyle.

    This year it is my goal to master quick meal prep using very simple recipes that I don’t have to spend too much time or resources on in the kitchen. I am also sharing some of these recipes on our website that I have or will be trying this season.

    https://www.madacrefarms.com/maf-recipe

    My ultimate goal is to find quick ways to eat great food grown using sustainable practices and not have to spend all my time in the kitchen. I am determined to figure out what works and share it with anyone who is interested.

    Moral of the story… You are who you are.. be proud of that. It is likely that you had a super hero in your story who handed you their cape. Own it, make it better and then pass it on.

    -✌🏼Jamie

  • Crooked Smile

    There is a certain kind of power that comes with having confidence. As a child growing up that continued on as a young adult the only thing I was confident of was the confidence I lacked.. Back then I had an unbelievably crooked smile. This carried on until shortly after I graduated high school. My family could not afford to pay for braces and I do not ever remember asking for them because I already knew it just wasn’t financially possible.

    I look back on all my photos growing up and see a very unconfident girl with a closed mouth smile or a partial smile. I remember absolutely hating picture day because the expectation was a smile showing your teeth..and I was terrified of having to see that memory captured and hung on a wall.

    Just before college started I remember going to our local dentist and asking her if I could setup a payment plan for her to fix my smile. Looking back I was a risky bet.. but she without any hesitation agreed and changed my life on the outside. Little did I know I still needed quite a bit of work on the inside…

    I sometimes feel myself going back into that space of not being confident especially with the things we are now tackling at the farm. To me it is so unbelievably uncomfortable to walk into a room full of farmers or joining a farmers market and just be at the beginning stages of the game while it feels everyone else is well beyond that point. It almost feels like an exhibit full of pictures and the only one’s hanging are my crooked smile. These are my inner fears resurfacing of not being good enough..

    I think this is where the art of comparison tags itself in and takes a seat at our already full table. I start to compare what we have accomplished to others who may or may not have been in the game longer. The feeling of suck less do better consumes me. It always seems to happen at the most inopportune time.

    What I started to realize is that I was going through life fixing my outside thinking it was fixing my inside. I would buy the fanciest things we could afford and move us to areas across the country that I thought would create happiness. If things looked great on the outside they must be great on the inside right… It wasn’t until we moved back home and I started to realize that I didn’t really have a need for fancy things anymore and where we lived the truest value comes from your character and grit.. boy what a wake up call to realize you have to dig a little deeper and realize it’s time to work on the inside that actually fixes the outside to build that true confidence.

    For us we have had to learn everything on this farm from a brand new perspective. This meant we were starting over. It was quite literally a new beginning for us. Our son graduated and moved out. Ryan and I were navigating life as empty nesters and embarking on this farm journey. In the beginning it was extremely difficult to not give up.

    One of the biggest things we had to understand was that we could not compare ourselves to others because we would 100% lose every time in our eyes. We were and still are our own biggest critics. For example.. it took us quite a bit of time to build our goat paddock we just couldn’t get it to meet our perfect. So we just continued to work at it even on days we felt less than mediocre. Six months later we finally finished it, and without a doubt it may not meet some folks standard of perfect but it is perfect for us. Or spending months learning how to use a commercial vinyl cutter Ryan purchased when we moved to this farm because he had more faith in myself than I did to use it to create a potential income for the farm. That thing sat for two years until I was finally sick of looking at it and told myself I was going to figure it out. It took me months to learn it it. I am actually still figuring out the things I can make with it. I would go to bed at midnight only to wake up at 3 AM to get back at it to make farm merchandise. Then mustering up all the courage I had to post about it to only learn now we need to work on our marketing game! So now that is what I am working on these days.

    The cause

    It is difficult not to fall back into the comparison game and come up with a million reasons why the outcome isn’t as we predicted it to be and give up but we don’t. We don’t because we are different than what we were as two young adults meeting in the lobby at Kirkwood Community College who had absolutely no idea what we wanted out of life and have grown in ways I can’t explain nor would have ever imagined.

    Don’t get me wrong there is a lot of fixing to do.. I mean a lot but there is nothing more humbling to look back and say we did that and then grab each other’s hand and say come on we got a ways to go.

    So yes when you get caught up in the merry go round of comparison you need to work the courage up to jump off while that thing is still spinning.

    Moral of the story..Crooked smile or not.. own your confidence even on your most unconfident days. Trust me…even the most confident people aren’t as strong as you think.

    ✌🏼-Jamie

  • The Farm Tour

    They say if you do what you love you never work a day in your life.. I never really fully understood what this quote meant until our very first farm tour.

    Farming isn’t our full time gig. Ryan and I work in corporate America with the flexibility of work from home careers. This right now is what fuels our farm. Some might be thinking you both work from home which means you are together almost 100% of the time. Yes, yes we are. He is my best friend and we sometimes finish each other’s sentences and yes we get on each other’s nerves. We are also the driving force behind each other’s goals.

    What does this have to do with the very experience we had together that made me put in my two weeks notice to my old mindset?

    Everything… it was the summer of 2022 this was the 2nd year of us participating in the Reinbeck’s farmers market. The market thought it would be a great opportunity to get the community involved by giving them a glimpse into their local gardeners and specialty crop grower’s worlds. They were absolutely right!

    We at that time were just two years in on owning our property that needed so much work and still does. This farm tour catapulted our drive to take action faster. I remember waking up before our corporate careers began and going 100mph in the morning working until our alarm’s went off letting us know we had 15 minutes to commute to our desk jobs. We would do the same thing on our lunch break and as soon as we wrapped up our corporate day we were hitting the soil until it was too dark to see what we were doing. We were loving every minute of it even though we were worn down and so unbelievably sore.

    When the date arrived for the farm tour I can honestly say we were less than ready although we were working so hard every day to a point our bodies could barely move. We knew we had so much more in the works. Ryan and I talked about what we were going to say and how we were going to give the tour on a very unready farm.

    I remember people started to show up and Ryan was no where to be found. I had to go find him.

    What you didn’t know on that day was that Ryan doesn’t do crowds. He gets anxious and avoids those situations at all costs. He worked up the courage and I took lead. What you may not have known about me is that I was barely getting my feet wet in the farm scene and you were experiencing the tour through my very unsteady confidence in what we were doing. I later found Ryan in the tour sharing his vision with the crowd with no anxiousness or nervousness. His vision was just rolling off the tongue as he was smiling and laughing with our community. That was such an incredible sight to see. Considering less than an hour prior he was clamming up on me.

    Seeing all the people that day not really caring that we were not experts but just genuinely engaged in our vision of the property and seeing the work we were putting in to make this property what it should be was something that changed everything for us. Right then and there I was bought into the vision.

    We walked the community through the plans for the property and one of them happened to be the barn project. We were selling shirts that day and the community was there for it. The money for the shirts all went into the barn project. It took us two years to get the barn moved but it was a feeling of accomplishment because we told our community that was part of the plan. We have so much work to do on this property it is overwhelming. The property looks completely different than what it did on that farm tour.

    We will be offering a farm tour this season to share our progress! We will also be participating in Reinbeck Farmers Market Garden Tour this season. I don’t necessarily know that we have had an opportunity to thank the amazing people who setup that tour for Reinbeck that year or really shared the impact that the community had on us that day but you changed our world. We have not stopped working towards those goals we shared since that day.

    So yes it is so unbelievably true.. You never work a day in your life if you love what you do!

    Moral of the story.. You often find exactly what you need on the most unsteady path. Find the courage to take that path, you never know where it will lead you and who you will meet along the way. ✌🏼- Jamie

    More about us!

  • Shiny Things

    If I had the opportunity to give the 20 year old me advice that would have changed the way I live for the better in my now 40 somethings… I would tell myself this.

    Don’t be fascinated by other people’s glitter because it may not be your gold.

    Say no to those credit cards they pushed down your throat when you were in the common gathering areas in college. along with not falling into the trap of comparison and insecurities seeing all the beautiful girls wearing the fancy clothes that made you question your value and had you go to those same retail stores and apply for those credit cards and max them out the same day so you felt you were worth something. Trust me you won’t find self worth in material things.

    Don’t take out those extra students loans you don’t need because it will take you 20 years to pay them off and you find yourself rotating debt around to pay for itself.

    If only I wasn’t so distracted by those shiny things. Ryan has always been the grounded one out of us. He has always been my checks and balances. He has been the one saying we need to chase financial freedom. I never really cared to ask more until about 4 years ago. I am now more so than ever very much aware of what things cost.

    We don’t need brand new cars.. the best car hands down is one that is paid for.

    I don’t wear fancy clothes.

    We quite frankly are intentionally broke. Not even kidding on this and I couldn’t be more happier. The end goal is in sight.

    We have been extremely focused on paying off debt and made a commitment that we won’t acquire new debt.. Had we of been on the same page 20 years ago we both would have been retiring and having the ability to work our dream job full time right now.

    If you are reading this, there is no better time than now to start. We started to take the approach if we can’t pay for it we save for it and have not looked back since.

    Don’t get me wrong. It’s tough to hear about people taking fancy trips and not want to splurge because we feel we deserve it. Or seeing the latest and greatest in things…but at the end of the day someone else’s situation is likely not your same situation or if they were anything like me back in the day it’s a smoking mirror.

    I have learned that money doesn’t buy happiness.. it buys things. It is a short term high, then the regret sets in. Happiness doesn’t live in glitz and glitter.. it lives in grit and purpose. Don’t forget that. We found exactly that on this farm. Now we are living our dream nights and weekends. If only my younger self knew what was in store for my older self I would be sharing with you the full time dream..

    If you are a young adult reading this.. trust me you will thank me when you are reaching your 40’s and not working that 9-5 because you lived well below your means and stacked your paper and retiring earlier than the rest of the people your age.

    Moral of the story.,. Don’t be fooled by those shiny things or those who have them. The true gold is time, and as you get older it will make more sense. I mean that is after all how we truly pay for things if you really think about it.

    ✌🏼Jamie

  • The Wake Up Call From Rural Iowa

    There is absolutely nothing like living in rural Iowa. I mean nothing,,,

    We have had the privilege to live in two other states outside of Iowa. I think for that very reason we find more appreciation for small town living.

    This is also coming from someone who would hit up the local Starbucks once and sometimes twice a day or stop at the shopping outlets and spend money we didn’t necessarily have on things I really didn’t need.

    When we moved back home it was a bit of an adjustment for me. I never realized that almost every small town has a Casey’s gas station and a Dollar Store. Two locations that I never really went to living in Illinois or Colorado. We just didn’t have access to them.

    Living in the Chicagoland area our properties were extremely close to each other. So close you could put your hand out the window and nearly touch your neighbor’s home. In Colorado we had more space but we were restricted by an HOA and had occasional run-ins with bear and mountain lions.

    Both states completely different backdrop but I found myself doing the same things.

    Moving back home to Iowa and buying a farm in a rural part of the state I soon realized what was important to me and it was not the Starbucks that is 30+ minutes away or the big box shopping centers.

    This living forced me to dive a little deeper into what I really needed in life. It also showed me that I was spending way too much money on things that never made an impact to big companies that could care less if I bought from them because the next person would.

    It forced me to look at other options. For example my coffee addiction and yes I still love my lattes but did I love them enough to make a single trip 30+ minutes to support a globally known billion dollar company who calls me by my government name and mispronounces it every time or could the local coffee shops who are run by women, who live in the city they run their business in and support their community make a latte just as good or better?

    So yes when I splurge these days I no longer hit up the Starbucks. I hit up Beans and Blooms out of Reinbeck, Iowa to make me an iced Caramel Macchiato or hit up Natural Grind in Grundy Center, Iowa for a hot Chai Tea Latte. I do this now even if I am heading to an area that has a Starbucks. It was a mental shift for me.

    I find the same things happen with small farms. It is extremely easy to make a trip to the store 30+ miles away to purchase meat that was likely not raised in Iowa or vegetables that traveled over 1500 miles to land on the grocery store shelves blasted with chemicals to make them look pretty and last longer.

    Living in rural Iowa and buying a property, trying to build it into a sustainable farm has taught us that it is not easy work at all, but it is the most rewarding thing we have ever experienced.

    Especially when we have people randomly stop by or reach out to say they heard about what we are doing and give us words of encouragement or support our farm by buying vegetables from us during our growing season at one of the local markets we attend or even drive 10-15+ minutes passing more convenient options to support a small farm. I absolutely get it now!

    We have so many options available to us in our small community.

    We have Holly at 5R Farms who also sells great produce and does amazing things with flowers. The Wical’s who have great produce at the market along with her famous pickles and baked goods! Grandma D’s baked goods, I love her monster protein snack! Can we talk about Marley and his tomatoes! Yuko who makes her amazing salts that I am still putting to great use! Did you also know that Yuko does a Live yoga on YouTube each week!👇

    These are all great options around the Reinbeck area! Gladbrook also has some amazing vegetable farmers we have met! They will post on Facebook when they are having market and offer some great variety! We are hoping to get more involved with this market this year!

    Last but not least there is an amazing baker in Toledo by the name of Frosted Bliss who makes these cake cups people… If you haven’t had the pleasure of a cake cup you are missing out! She is at the Toledo market and has a Facebook page!

    I could go on and on about local options. I am only scratching the surface. Rural Iowa has taught me to appreciate my surroundings. Thank you Iowa for the wake up call, it came right on time!

    Moral of the story… Convenient isn’t always better. Take the blinders off and dive head first into your local community. You will be amazed at what you find and who you can impact♥️

    -✌🏼Jamie

    www.madacrefarms.com

  • Silent Rooms

    I want to share with you a moment from our journey—a storm we had to weather on the way to building the life we dreamed of here in Iowa.

    After selling our home in Colorado, we thought we’d found the perfect farm—a sprawling agricultural property with a pond near Waterloo. It felt like destiny. But looking back now, the red flags were everywhere, waving wildly, as if to warn us. Instead of heeding them, we pushed forward, blinded by hope and determination.

    not the actual property but you get the point

    The delays started almost immediately. Paperwork moved at a snail’s pace, and yet we told ourselves it was nothing out of the ordinary. Then came the inspection. The property had taken on water in the basement—something no one had mentioned until we uncovered it. But still, we pressed on.

    There’s one moment from that inspection that sticks with me. As we walked the property, a car drove by. Slowly. Too slowly. Something about it made my stomach twist, but I brushed it off, convincing myself it wasn’t worth worrying over.

    A few days later, everything came crashing down. Our realtor called with unexpected news: the seller no longer wanted to sell the property to us. We hadn’t even received the full inspection report yet. It didn’t make sense.

    And then it got worse.

    The seller tried to press trespassing charges against us. Against us—buyers with a signed inspection agreement allowing us to be there. Our realtor had to intervene, showing the police our paperwork to clear up the situation. It was messy, humiliating, and, honestly, devastating.

    We had poured so much time, money, and emotion into this property. But it was clear we needed to walk away. And so, we did.

    After that ordeal, I built walls around myself. I became jaded, angry, and skeptical. Every argument about whether Iowa was truly the right place to plant roots only solidified those walls. Ryan, on the other hand, never wavered.

    “This is our home,” he’d say, his voice steady. “One bad experience won’t take that away.”

    To him, it was a stumble, not a fall. Where I saw betrayal, he saw a chance to try again. It’s always been Ryan who believes in second chances, who sees the good in people—even when I can’t.

    Eventually, we came across a new opportunity: the Extreme Home Makeover house in Gladbrook. That’s a story for another day, but we purchased the property in December 2020.

    By spring of 2021, I was still guarded. I wasn’t ready to trust this new chapter. Then one afternoon, the doorbell rang. We weren’t expecting anyone, and truthfully, we rarely get company.

    I opened the door to meet Gary O., one of our neighbors. He introduced himself warmly, gave us his number, and even stopped by later that day to help us with a project.

    I don’t think he realized it then, but Gary shattered the walls I had spent months building. His kindness, his willingness to show up for us—a couple of strangers—was more than a neighborly gesture. It was hope.

    Gary became the first to remind me of something I had forgotten: there are still good people in the world, people who will clap for you even when the room is silent.

    Over time, I began to see it wasn’t just Gary. We were surrounded by neighbors and a community who cheered for us in ways big and small. Their kindness turned Iowa into more than a place to live—it became home.

    I see it now. We are exactly where we’re supposed to be. Sometimes, you just have to get through the storm to appreciate the calm that follows.

    I debated whether to share this story, but it’s an important part of our journey. It reminds me that every setback we face throws a little more fuel on the fire of determination—to accomplish something extraordinary or die trying.

    Moral of the story… Kindness is powerful. You have the ability to make a difference in someone’s life. Have the courage to clap even if it means you may be the only one clapping in a silent room.

    Be someone’s Gary. ♥️

    – ❤️✌🏼 Jamie


  • What Will They Think?

    There use to be a thought that I gave way more space in my mind than it deserved. It still often sneaks its way in to take a chair in my mental space that I find myself needing to let it know… that seat is already taken by do what makes you happy.

    Last year we started to have some troubles with our truck. It was in the shop more than on the road. We still had a loan on the truck but not too far from paying it off. The dealership it was at offered to buy it from us. Ryan and I agreed it was time to let it go. This paid off our loan and we were a step closer to financial freedom… but we needed another truck. We searched and searched but everything was so overpriced and we were not about to get another loan. Ryan being Ryan sold me on the fact we could just get a cheap truck for now because we had just made it through winter and just need a truck to get us back and forth from market. 

    I reluctantly agreed but deep down knew Ryan was going to be extremely cheap with his selection because of how close we have become to reaching our debt free goal. He found a truck 2 weeks later and we went to look at it. Let’s just say she wasn’t pretty, it was almost 30 years old but was reliable we were told and it was an old city truck.

    Ryan bought it… I remember on the way home thinking what will people think when we pull up in this truck vs our much newer one? How do I explain this!? People are going to think we are experiencing financial hardship. This is embarrassing I thought to myself.

    My first official ride in that truck was to pick up farm supplies in Cedar Falls. It was a busy weekend and Ryan already knew I was a little embarrassed about the truck. We had to stop at Menards. I went to get out and the door would not open. Ryan was standing behind the truck and I looked at him and he smirked as he gave me the winding motion to roll down my window and open it from the outside. That was a humbling experience to say the least. It was a reminder of the greater goal we are after and to clear that mental space and make room for what makes you happy. Even if people see you coming and reconsider their parking decisions or hit that lock button a couple extra times for good measure… trust me it happened 😃 I think that by far was the most humbling part for me.

    I did voice a few grievances to him that day but inside I was laughing about the gentle reminder of being humble. Ryan names everything he brings into this house. The truck’s official name is Beverly. We drove Beverly all summer even though the heat never shut off at all and the truck didn’t have AC but Ryan got a little fan he would share every so often on the hottest of days.

    We ended up getting another truck after we saved enough money to make a sound financial decision to buy a newer truck before winter. Ryan put the old truck up for sale but it was me who told him not to sell Beverly because I would use that truck this summer for market. So if you happen to read this story about Beverly just know we have come a long way and I now drive her with pride even though my feet barely reach the peddles she reminds me to just move a little closer and don’t take her over 55 and we will be just fine.

    Moral of the story… We are conditioned far too much to care what others think. Let them park somewhere else and hit their lock button a few extra times. You continue to roll that window down and open it from the outside if you have to. Keep chasing your dreams. #behumble

    -Jamie

    http://www.madacrefarms.com

  • Abandoned Carts 🛒

    According to the Iowa Food Bank Association 229,500 Iowans including 80,190 children are having to make tough decisions on buying groceries or paying bills. Maybe you can relate in some shape or form or you know someone who can.

    https://www.iowafba.org/about-hunger

    I would like to share with you an experience that Ryan and I had in our 20’s. We started our family at a young age. There were times we had to make those tough decisions between groceries or bills. I remember we even swallowed our pride at one point and filled out the application for food stamp assistance. It was the first of the month and our first time using our food stamps. I was running point on the process and really had no clue how the system worked. We loaded our son up after Ryan made a grocery list for the month and off to Aldi’s we went. I remember it was extremely busy and we had a cart load. We stood in line to what felt like forever.. as we got to the cashier I whispered “we are using food stamps“. As the cashier ran the EBT card they looked back and said it was declined.. We had no money at that point we just finished paying all of our bills. We had to walk away without any groceries that day.

    I often think of that moment when we are grocery shopping and see abandoned carts of groceries.. Was that cart a decision that was made and bills won?

    I also recently read an article regarding the Des Moines Food Pantry Network (DMARC) saw their highest day of customers just this last September..and their busiest month in August of 2023.

    https://www.dmarcunited.org/2023/09/dmarc-food-pantry-network-sees-busiest-month-of-all-time-in-august/

    When we purchased this farm and started to carve out a space for our market garden we knew we wanted to have the ability to accept programs like SNAP and WIC. It was actually a priority for us. We wanted to be able to provide low income families with the same opportunities to eat fresh produce grown using sustainable practices that everyone else had access to.

    We had to take classes and continue to enroll yearly for some of these programs. We knew the value and impact that these programs can have on a family in need.

    What we have found is that we do not have very many customers who utilize the service we offer and we want to take a more proactive approach to let families know that we proudly accept these programs at the farm.

    Learn more about us here!

    We did after all utilize some of these services when we needed them and we didn’t have the accessibility of purchasing fresh produce grown responsibly when we were using these resources.

    If our farm gives even just one family in need the ability to eat fresh produce grown using sustainable practices we have succeeded in our goal.

    Moral of the story.. There is likely more to the story than it just being an abandoned cart of groceries. Remember that next time you see one. ✌🏼Jamie

  • In His Shoes

    There was a young boy that was born in Mississippi to a single mother who witnessed the unimaginable tragedy of his mother losing her vision.

    The young boy was raised by very strong women who embraced whatever was thrown their way and would always figure out how to make something out of nothing. The perseverance that they instilled in this young boy to never give up and always hold your head up high regardless of the situation is admirable.

    There is a story I would like to share with you that I am often reminded of on my hardest of days. It reminds me to keep moving regardless of what is thrown our way.

    This particular story happened when the young boy was in elementary school after his mother became blind. The young boy was in need of shoes for school and wanted Nikes. They were a little out of their price range but the young boys mother found a way to make it happen.

    She found a pair of Nikes that someone was selling. They told her they were baseball shoes and were within the budget. She sent the young boy to get the shoes. He was so excited when he saw the shoes in the box. He didn’t know what they actually were. He just thought they were cool, so he gave them the money and brought the shoes home.

    The young boy wore those shoes to school. They were very noisy as he walked down the hall and could barely stay standing because they were so slippery on the floor. The young boy was wearing baseball cleats. The kids at his school were relentless and gave him the business about those shoes.

    He ended up wearing those shoes for two weeks before his mother learned what was going on. He never complained… he after all picked up the shoes. He knew that things could be so much worse.

    The young boy in the story was Ryan.

    Ryan was raised by a team of very strong women and I mean strong. He is a very patient human being, probably one of the most patient people I know.

    Ryan and his grandmother

    I think of this story more often on the farm when I see him working on a project that is giving him a run for his money and he gets down on himself because he is struggling with figuring it out.

    We recently bought a hay wagon to turn it into something pretty cool if you ask me! I challenged Ryan to do the project on his own. He just needs to believe in himself as much as I do.

    I know sometimes he feels like the shoes just don’t fit.. However, the thing about Ryan is that he was raised by strong women who are driven. That just motivates him more and ignites his fire to keep chasing his dreams.

    Moral of the story… Sometimes we walk through life wearing the wrong shoes slipping and falling. Find the strength and courage to get up and stand tall until you find a better pair of shoes.

    -✌🏼Jamie

  • The GOAT..🐐

    The GOAT has a couple of different meanings to me these days.. Some refer to the GOAT as the greatest of all time. You ask me it means got out again today…

    Let me share with you a childhood memory that I carry with me that will shed a little more light on what experiences has helped shape me into who I am today. Maybe you can relate in some way.

    There was a brief period in my life as a child where we had the farm life experience. and I mean It was brief.. I never understood why it was so brief back then but I understand it now.

    I grew up with three brothers and one sister. I was a bit of a tomboy so I gravitated towards my brothers back then. I remember my dad bringing home our first goat, her name was Memory. Oh we loved her… I would ride her around the farm like she was my personal chauffeur. Looking back I am pretty sure she hated it but I loved her to pieces. I don’t remember much more outside of the joy she brought me.

    One day I came home and Memory was no longer there and the farm life soon became a distant blur. What I didn’t realize at that time was the difficult decisions going on due to financial hardship my parents were having to make. My parents gave me an experience that I will never forget with Memory even if it was brief I remember the happiness I felt like it was yesterday.

    Fast forward to today. Goats have always been part of the plan. Ryan is a forward thinker. He sets a purpose to any plan. The goats purpose is to help clear the over grown brush that has went unmanaged for many years on this property and potentially using our goats for milk in future ventures.

    Our first experience of goats on the farm was about two years ago. We brought in two Nigerian Dwarf does (female) goats. I immediately fell in love with them like I typically do with any animal.

    The plan was that Ryan would be the primary on this goat project. I would be available to offer my expert advice… totally kidding. We found out pretty quickly that the goats were intimidated by Ryan. They would not go near him nor could he catch them to try to leash train them.

    I stepped in to work with them and get them leashed trained. I am by far no expert so it took me quite awhile to get them comfortable. Lots and lots of animal crackers and often times I would just sit with them and pet them and we would go on short walks every day. Little did I realize how much they helped me not think about my daily stressors of my career. They eventually stopped needing leashes and would follow me anywhere.

    Winter started to get closer and we were able to get their paddock setup outside. We had an electric goat fence to “keep” them in.. Winter hit and I would haul water out to them. I remember one day I had just got done bringing water to them and headed back inside and as I am walking away I felt something behind me.. of course it’s one of them!

    I thought maybe I didn’t get the fence closed good enough so I put her back in and headed back into the house and not even 5 seconds later I look to my left and there she is just trotting along.

    Goats are amazing animals but are a lot of work and investment. If you are thinking about goats learn about them first and have the time they deserve to invest in them.

    From that day on since they learned how to literally scale the fence there was nothing holding them back. We had to bring them in the barn until Spring and then invest in a goat proof fence.. just kidding they don’t exist. They can get out of anything basically. They just need to have things in their paddock to keep them busy along with something to graze on.

    We also recently experienced loss due to illness which hit me like a ton of bricks. We brought in a buck on the property who was unknowingly ill and unfortunately got one of our girls very ill. We ended up losing both of them. Words of advice… be very intentional on where you purchase your goats from and know how they are cared for.

    It’s tough owning a farm let alone animals. Also just learning the basics and the time it takes to do that. We now have added more goats to the property and are expecting baby goats very soon.

    If you want to know what it feels like to have joy, excitement, anxiety, stress and frustration at the same time I highly recommend you get goats.

    We are working on a new paddock in the front of the property with a bit of a vision..

    How cool would it be to stop by the farm because you ran out of eggs or need to pick up a fresh ingredient for an amazing recipe you are trying after a hard day of work.

    As you park and get out of your vehicle you see lots of goats running and playing… and when you look around you see a bench with an open seat inviting you to stay even for just a moment. As you sit down from a tough day you see a goat jumping on her newly made goat swing that Jamie has been pushing Ryan to make for years.

    You can’t help to smile and forget about the chaos…

    Looking forward to one day soon seeing benches around the goat paddock filled with people who just need a moment even if it’s brief to forget about the chaos.

    Moral of the story…. Sometimes the littlest moments leave the greatest impact. Appreciate the littlest moments, trust me they matter.

    -✌🏼Jamie

  • The Extreme Home Makeover

    There are moments I seriously question our sanity. Taking on a project of this size, just the two of us, feels overwhelming at times—like trying to see the forest through the thickest of trees. But here’s the thing: every crazy decision we’ve made so far has been worth it.

    The plan for this Extreme Home Makeover? Restore it to its former glory while building efficiency into every inch of it. The efficiency part? That’s where it gets complicated. We have this massive house, sitting out here in what feels like the ruralest corner of the state. We’re about a mile off gravel—something we never gave much thought to until our first garden tour. Turns out, not everyone loves gravel roads like we do.

    But hearing those whispers of doubt? That only fuels us. It’s our fire to make this property so spectacular that gravel doesn’t even cross people’s minds—they’ll want to come out here regardless.

    And let’s be real: this house is a lot. I mean, it’s the product of a TV show called Extreme Home Makeover, not Charming Iowa Farmhouse. The family that originally lived here probably would’ve been perfectly happy with a cozy, typical Iowa home. But no, they got “extreme,” and now so do we.

    We’ve got our work cut out for us. Inside, it’s all about taking baby steps. We’ve tackled one bathroom—making it functional but not yet perfect. Heating costs were insane, so we installed a wood-burning stove, which has been a game-changer. We’ve painted, re-insulated, and done little fixes here and there.

    The dream? Once we’ve gotten this place back in shape, we want to open it up to the community. We imagine it as the perfect spot to host events, maybe even a place for guests to stay and experience life on the farm.

    Every year, we inch closer to our vision, balancing the farm’s needs with the house’s endless to-do list. It’s chaotic, exhausting, and sometimes overwhelming—but it’s also one of the most rewarding things we’ve ever done.

    Because for us, it’s not a matter of if we’ll make it happen. It’s a matter of what comes next when we finally do.

    Moral of the story… The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over, expecting different results. Step out of your comfort zone. Chase the wild, impossible dream. It’d be insane not to.

    -Jamie ❤️✌🏼

    Learn More About The Farm

  • Trust In Turnips

    We have a market garden we started here on our farm. One of the early goals was to start to build a presence in the community and get folks excited about what we are doing at the farm. What better way than to grow vegetables and participate at the local farmers markets right?!

    When I tell you we have never worked so hard for so very little… just take my word for it. We knew it was going to take some hard work to build a presence and knew that the farm would need more than just vegetables to get by.. we just needed to perfect our garden and then continue to add additional opportunities for income.

    We started to be very strategic about what and when we grow our produce. Last year we spent a ton of time calculating out our projected sales.. this is so embarrassing to admit but we didn’t even hit 20% of our goal.. I mean we had a plan people… here is where we really messed up.

    We pre-ordered our seeds. We selected crop that was new to us. One of these crops that we projected a decent sales from was Purple Globe Turnips. We had a 50’ bed of these vegetables… yes you heard me 50’. We would harvest to take to market and then end up bringing a majority of the turnip harvest back home. We couldn’t even give them away. I tried to figure out where we went wrong. At the end of the season as I am trying to figure out what to do with them… we put all of our trust in turnips.

    We were faced with many people who had never tried turnips, myself included, I could not give our customers a great answer of how they tasted because I hadn’t ever had any myself. I remember coming home after a market and started to research what turnips are good for and did a few taste tests. After that day I could tell customers that they taste like a mix between a radish and potato. I could also provide our customers with the ability this root crop has to be substituted with a potato without the cholesterol or the fat along with if stored correctly it could hold for months.. by the time I figured all of this out our season was over and I was left with almost an entire 50’ bed of turnips that I committed to preserve so the food we worked so hard for doesn’t go to waste.

    I have learned to make vegetable soup and add some turnip for flavor. We received a fantastic recipe from one of our customers using radish. I substituted it with turnip. We are also fortunate enough to have saved for and purchased a small freeze dryer that helped me preserve the harvest.

    Moral of the story…. Creating a plan is great. But having a plan that supports the vision and goal of the true outcome is the key to success. We set a financial plan and forgot about the people.

    -Jamie

  • Wait… You Don’t Own A TV!?

    The first year we moved back was a whirlwind of us getting everything organized at the farm and sharing our dream and vision with family and friends. We of course received the smirks and eye rolls knowing most of them think we are weird and crazy. We started to think maybe we are too.. As we continued to share our passions and dreams we soon realized that we got less calls and less visitors but we have each other and the belief in our dreams being a reality continues to grow. 

    We started to find likeminded people who still to this day believe in us on days we have nothing left in the tank. Strangers reaching out with words of encouragement that have now become our driving force.

    This life isn’t easy but it is rewarding in ways people may not understand.

    I remember about a year ago my father came to visit and was going to show Ryan how to hunt. That meant he would spend the night.. he had only been to our home once or twice prior. He sat down on our couch and said where is your tv!? I had to explain to my father that we don’t own one and gave it to our son because we found ourselves not using it. He was floored! What do you mean you don’t have a tv!? What do you guys do without a tv, I responded we talk about our goals and create plans for our success. 

    My father gave me that look I knew far too well since coming back home… the smirk and eye roll. I am now reminded anytime I visit my family who all live within a 10 mile radius of each other of how weird I am not owning a tv.. and I of course invite them over to show them what we do and how rewarding living a life like this can be. 

    So… we don’t own a TV, we don’t have a cable bill either. We also don’t miss it at all. We have so many things to focus on it would be a distraction for us.
    Some may think it’s weird… and that is okay. To us it’s normal and in a way freeing us from distractions.

    Moral of the story… Don’t let someone’s definition of you get in the way of your dreams and goals. Let your freak flag fly! 

    -Jamie✌🏼

  • Flight Risk Adjacent

    I get the privilege to lead an exceptional team of men and women during the day and get the honor of working with my husband on our farm dreams after hours.

    As a leader you often are asked if there are any potential flight risks. If you are not familiar with the term it basically means are there any possibilities that someone is looking for a better opportunity outside the organization.

    Typically as a leader if you have any top talent as a flight risk to leave to competitors you try to find development opportunities to help them to the next level within the organization.

    If you would have asked me 5 years ago I would have told you that my ultimate goal was to climb that corporate ladder so when my leader was asked about a flight risk I would not come up in conversation…I was the perfect corporate employee. Work over family…

    What I have come to realize is that when you have a potential flight risk and the opportunity presented isn’t another competitor but a dream or vision… you don’t stand a chance. 

    Ryan and I would joke about being flight risk adjacent. Which to us meant we are not quite a flight risk but flying along side of the possibility… I mean we even talked about it on a video. We have set things in motion, our motive is no longer monetary.. it is happiness and living a life that has meaning. 

    It is not a secret we have a dream, a vision and a purpose which has started to be undeniable. We no longer hide its shine.

    So now when my leader is asked about flight risk I know my name crosses that list and the explanation isn’t due to competition but due to an undeniable passion and purpose to live louder. But.. until I depart they will continue to get 110% and my commitment to leave the organization better than when I found it. Here’s to being flight risk adjacent ✈️

    Moral of the story… Change is scary but so is not chasing your dreams. #flightriskadjacent

    -Jamie ✌🏼

  • What Is It Costing You?

    Ryan has always and I mean always talked about owning a farm. I never took it serious enough to really think it would happen until our first relocation for our careers.

    We bought our first home on the east side of Waterloo. We were so proud to say we owned something. I ended up landing a gig that would help relocate us to the Chicagoland. Ryan had a career that would allow him to transfer but was warned of the reputation of what he may be getting himself into. He never really shared that with me until after we already moved. He knew I needed more and was willing to sacrifice. 

    We had made a commitment that when 5 years hit and if I had no advancement towards my goals we would come back home and buy a farm… Ryan was so unhappy in Illinois. He did however end up landing a sweet virtual gig. I remember it was the 5th year Ryan of course reminded me every day. I ended up throwing my name in the hat for a position with another company for a job in Wisconsin but that ended up changing a bit and was later told either Arizona or Colorado… I ended up getting the job. I told Ryan and he was reluctant, but I assured him he could pick the state and home. He agreed and chose Colorado.

     We had a very short window to move. We searched for property after property, and it was getting down to crunch time. We ended up buying a property sight unseen spending an uncomfortable amount of money on the home for a one-acre property at the base of a mountain with a very flexible HOA that allowed livestock we were told…

    Ryan ended up packing up our home In Illinois basically by himself so I could get to Colorado to start my new job. Ryan also did this for our Illinois move so by now he was a professional.

    I remember the first day Ryan made it to the house in Colorado he was unbelievably tired but needed to run to the local Tractor Supply store with a trailer still attached to his truck with our belongings… I jumped in for the ride. I of course stayed in the truck while he went into the store and about an hour later he rolls out with a box in his hand and a Tractor Supply employee running out after him to give him a hat and welcomed him to the community. That particular individual at that time was about to be a driving force in Ryan’s life and provide the very inspiration Ryan was needing. 

    Ryan smiling from ear to ear hopped in the truck and handed me the box… I heard little chirps coming from it and I looked at Ryan and said you didn’t!?…. He smiled back and said I did…

    From that point right there it was evident things were going to change. Ryan immediately started working on a coop setup and we spent quite a bit of money to do it in our backyard. We had two coops Ryan was starting to really enjoy Colorado living.. He named our homestead Mad Acre Homestead.  Mad for our last name and acre to represent the one acre of land we now called ours in Colorado. 

    There was a brief moment in time where I thought Colorado would be our forever home…until the day we got a letter.

    I was traveling for work. I traveled 2-3 times in a month. I was barely home. Ryan was the one taking care of everything. I heard the disappointment in his voice. The letter was from the HOA. The letter stated someone complained about our chickens and the noise.. mind you at that time we had no roosters. As soon as I got back home we went to the HOA meeting where they showed us the guidelines of no chickens. We were actually provided an old doc from our realtor that showed us we could have livestock.

    We fought it and of course was a losing battle. So I did what any normal person would do… if you can’t beat them, join them. So I joined the HOA set on a mission to change the views of the community and get the ability to bring chickens back to our property. This was after all my dream property. I spent a lot of time changing guidelines and getting approvals. The next step was walking the pavement and then 2020 hit. At this point Ryan had enough. We were just informed my job turned virtual and that was the missing piece of the puzzle. We sold everything we owned that would not fit into a U-Haul and I mean everything, and we never looked back.

    Moral of the story…If you think you will find happiness in things, you might.. but what is it costing you? I was so focused on never stopping and reaching the next bar that I was stepping on the very people who help elevate me to reach it and never turned around to give them my hand to pull them up beside me. It cost me time I could never get back. Time is way more valuable than things..trust me I know this far too well.

    — Jamie✌🏼

  • So What’s Your Plan

    I remember the month we moved in… it was quite literally in the middle of winter. Ryan would tell me to put something warm on so we could go outside and walk the property. So I of course did. We would walk side by side and Ryan would tell me his plan on how we are going to make this into something. This happened almost daily and we still do this today even in the middle of winter. This ongoing vision continues to push us even on our hardest of days. I will share the plan in this blog. Today I get the honor to share with you the vision behind our market garden.

    We need to build an income for the farm. Yes we have full time careers but the plan is to have the farm be sustainable. For us that meant a farm that takes care of itself. So we carved out space on the southeast side of the property which is constricted a bit by concrete slabs. We found a company to come in and get the well fixed which we knew had likely issues even though the prior owner said they were not sure due to not using in a while. We expected worse case scenario. 

    Once we carved out that area and spent countless days and nights and endless unofficial marriage counseling sessions along with screaming matches on how to make the best of the best we were able to come out of it in our eyes shining brighter than we have ever shined before. This market garden has become so much more than a way to build an income for the property or bring people to the farm.. it has become a testament of our ability to combine forces and grow into something so much greater than we ever thought we could be.

    We ended up finding a greenhouse on Craigslist in MN, so we bought it the following season and added a small greenhouse to one of the plots last year and started to figure out how to grow in it. While we were figuring this out we had also thrown our name in the hat for a grant to obtain a much larger greenhouse. During this time of figuring out our small greenhouse we were awarded the grant to obtain the much bigger one. This would give us the ability to extend our growing season.. Now we needed to figure out how to grow in it and of course how to get this thing put together.

    Here we have two people who have very minimal DIY skills with multiple DIY projects going on the property.. Not sure if you can relate but for me being a person that needs efficiency and process now in a world of DIY chaos I was stressed to say the very least. We searched for people to pay to help us and what I have found is when people pull up they see the house and assume we will shell out money.. Remember not rich, not comfortable just focused. We would continue to get extreme bids or we would have contractors tell us the job isn’t worth their time and not show up. We are two people who have always made it on our own not needing much from anyone until now… you can only imagine how unbelievably hard it is to ask for assistance. What we didn’t realize was we didn’t have to, being in the community we are in people naturally want to help. This is something we just were not use to… Our neighbors stop by at the right times and help us, it’s like they just know. Our friends from the community reach out to lend a hand at exactly the right time! We are truly blessed with the people in our lives.

    The plan hasn’t changed for the market garden it has just continued to grow. We try to add additional markets to join each year but becomes increasingly difficult to juggle the market, getting ready for the market and our day time jobs. During growing season we typically get 4-5 hrs of sleep and hit the garden very early in the morning to water, harvest and tend to along with late night similar routines. It has gotten a little easier and continues to create mental and physical toughness. 

    One day very soon the plan is to have a self-serve farm stand on the property that we stock daily with our fresh produce and other goods produced here on the farm and other local vendors. I can’t wait for the day where I am able to greet people coming to the farm and share with them how the plan all started with a cold winter walk.

    Moral of the story… It all starts with a vision… it is up to you to finish how your story ends and the main characters in it. 

    -Jamie

  • Braving The Storm

    Such a beautiful photo of this Iowa winter storm at the farm. This is us making the best of it. We did after all make the decision to buy a farm in Iowa knowing how brutal winters can be.

    What you don’t see in this photo is us rushing out on our breaks the day before from our corporate careers to make sure all of our animals are holding up in this storm. We of course work from home and don’t ever have snow days which is the trade off of a virtual employee. I wouldn’t change it for the world and know that there are many people that would appreciate a job with this kind of flexibility. Not complaining as it has its perks.

    While everyone we come into virtual contact with is expressing how ready they are for the weekend, I have a list of very important tasks I must tend to and finding a way to complete my work expectations so I can immediately rush out into the belly of the storm with Ryan to make sure our farm is still standing with no lives lost.

    We rushed out right at 5 and immediately knew it was going to get worse before it got better. We power-housed into our barn and made space for our ducks and farm dog. Running the ducks one in each hand to the barn as our farm dog right beside us running back and forth. We got them in all safe and sound. The chickens were safe in their coop along with the geese in there house. The peacocks were sitting on their stoop just living their best life… they had a dry coop to seek refuge so we let them do them.

    Running back and forth in waist deep even shoulder deep drifts is exhausting. We landed back in the house 3 hours later and looked at each other and smiled. We did it! At least for the night we could rest easy knowing our farm is safe.

    As we woke up the next morning we walked out with the wind not letting up. This was the first photo I took to represent this very day. The farm was still safe but new challenges ahead of us. Waist deep drift’s literally everywhere we walk, Ryan is digging out but not quick enough as the wind continues to fill the paths back up with snow. It took us 3 hours to do our chores and as I am falling every other step thinking about what everyone else is up to I think to myself I still wouldn’t trade this for the world and continued to carry 5 gallon buckets of water to our livestock. I would do it 100 times over if I had to. That’s what this photo will now be a forever reminder of why we do what we do.

    Moral of the story… Find what fuels your fire even on the toughest of days. Trust me you will know when you find it. It won’t be a matter of asking yourself if you are sure, it will be a matter of you telling yourself lets conquer the world regardless of the storm♥️

    -Jamie

  • Three Sisters

    Have you ever heard of the Three Sisters Companion Planting technique? It is a Native American practice to maximize growing space and promote strong growth and sustainability.

    The three crops planted together would be corn, beans, and a variety of squash or pumpkin. The corn would be planted first, then around two weeks later the pole bean and squash. The corn provides stability for the growth of the climbing bean and the squash planted at the same time of the bean would provide shade to the soil. It was a practice that is still used and feeds communities.

    We gave this very method a try except I didn’t know at the time the meaning or truly the best practice behind it. What I mean by that is I didn’t take the time to research how to actually use its fullest potential.

    We planted everything at the same time and used a pea vs a bean at the peak of summer. If you are new to gardening like I was, planting a pea at the peak of summer is like throwing money out the window. Peas do not grow well in the summer heat. The corn and squash took off but the peas didn’t grow as fast because of the summer heat and were choked out by the squash. We had a few plantings that worked out okay but not ideal. When we do this again we will plant the corn first, then the climbing bean and then the squash after we of course research the best varieties to use!

    I couldn’t understand at the time why our companion planting wasn’t thriving but stepping back I realized that had we of taken the time to do the proper research we would have spent less time trying to troubleshoot our lack of an abundant harvest.

    Moral of the story… Try new things! It may not be an instant success story but imagine all the great chapters you get to add until it becomes your greatest story told!

    -Jamie

  • Humble Pie

    One of the biggest questions we get hands down since we moved back to Iowa is “if you don’t mind me asking, what do you guys do for a living?” I will admit in the beginning after I was asked a few times I started to wonder if it is a common question or was there something more behind it that peaked curiosity. I would respond my typical response we work in corporate America and have been fortunate with our career paths… but here is what I really wanted to say..

    Ryan and I come from very humble beginnings. That may be what initially fueled our fires. We met in college here in Iowa both had no clue what we wanted to do in college just knew it was what we were supposed to do to be successful right? Life of course happens and we started a family very young when neither of us were prepared to bring another life into this world. That again fueled our fire. Ryan and I both worked full time jobs and took online and night classes to finish our degrees. After acquiring all that debt I couldn’t find a job that would pay me more than what I was already making and I knew I needed more. Ryan ended up landing a great job here in Iowa that he enjoyed but he knew I needed more. This is where we ended up moving for our careers. We missed out on a lot for our careers. While our families were back in Iowa we were working on building a better life for our young family. This meant a lot of sacrifice for everyone including our son.

    We are by far not rich or comfortable in any means. We are just not shy of taking risks. You have to remember that we both came from humble beginnings. When Ryan wanted to move back to Iowa we were very fortunate to be able to sell our home in CO quickly and Ryan has always been a penny pincher. You are probably thinking a penny pincher yet a risk taker!? Yes it’s true a risk taker with always more than one plan. It has been what has gotten us to where we are today.

    We took a risk and bought an Extreme Home Makeover House… we now refer to it as an extreme fixer upper. We have a vision for this property and don’t mind sharing it. We may be a little slower coming off the blocks on this one but it’s because our plan in no shape or form includes acquiring new debt. Everything we do on this property we save for. It will be one of our most extraordinary accomplishments and can only hope you stick around to see it!

    Moral of the story.. There is almost always more to someone’s story than what they are giving you or what you think you see. 

    -Jamie

  • We Can Learn A Little Something From Bees

    I read a quote that I get reminded of frequently when I see our honey bees zooming around on the property or I see them doing something extraordinary.. “Anyone who thinks they’re too small to make a difference, has never met a honey bee. -Unknown 

    That quote couldn’t be any more true. I took this photo (far right) one extremely hot summer day. I remembered I had to google what and why they were doing what they were doing because there is no way I would be chasing another bee swarm.

    What I found out was that the bees will often beard the hive on hot days to regulate temperature. I mean it seemed like the entire hive was out there just buzzing away. It was quite incredible.

    They we’re working together for a common cause. That inspired me. So I started to learn more about bees and their importance to the food system in our world. 75% of our food crop depends on bees to pollinate them in order to produce food, did you know that!? I had no clue…

    Everything started to make sense on why Ryan has become so invested in nature’s magicians ( I borrowed that line 😃) but it’s true they are magical and it was at that moment I knew I had to help do my part on this property to build an environment they could thrive in.

    This means spending countless hours creating a habitat with native wildflowers all around the property and when the project doesn’t turn out the way it’s intended we don’t complain about it we just do it again. (I should say don’t complain much, still working on the no complaining part 😉)

    So if ever given the chance to visit our property and you see the countless unfinished projects going just know each and every one of those projects started with a dream and vision and it may be our second or third go round at it but we haven’t gave up we are just learning as we go.

    We often feel like an army of two on this property chasing a crazy dream that most people we come in contact with may not understand but it’s the impact we know we can make and often look to our bees for inspiration.. such a small creature has one of the greatest abilities to impact the world.

    Moral of the story.. Build an environment you can thrive in even if it takes multiple tries. Be sure to build that environment with those that understand your purpose. Be a honey bee 🐝 

    – Jamie

  • The Glass House

    Such a beautiful moment captured into this photo.. The countless hours we spent on building the pathway to the greenhouse, the bickering back and forth of what to grow along with the story leading up to the greenhouse.

    It was love at first sight with that greenhouse. I had no idea why at that very moment because at that point in time I barely opened a bag of soil let alone knew how to grow a vegetable garden but it was something about having a glass house that intrigued me.

    The month we moved in after doing what we could inside the now what we know to be the Extreme Fixer Upper. We started to work on that old glass house…getting it cleaned out from the years of being treated like an old storage unit. We however saw its greatest potential.

    The more we dug and cleaned the more we realized how much work it was going to take to get this glass house back into its greenhouse potential. We didn’t care we knew what we had.

    It didn’t come without its challenges. The first spring we immediately kicked into high gear and started to try to use it. What we soon realized is that it doesn’t keep heat.. so we invested far too much time and money trying to make it into something that it wasn’t built for. It took us about two years to realize how that glass house could be great. We stopped trying to figure out how to heat it and started figuring out what we could grow best in it and how. That was a game changer for us.

    The moment we saw the glass house for its true great greenhouse potential we were able to grow seedlings without heat, get amazing spinach along with other greens. We also figured out how to grow cucumbers and tomatoes a little bit longer in the cold Iowa seasons.

    Much like most things on this property the greenhouse needs work. We would like to redo the slab and have even discussed building it below the frost line. Just a few dreamers over here with a vision♥️. Until then we with work with our greenhouse’s greatest potential!

    Moral of the story… Don’t fit the mold of what you are expected to be. Your greatest potential is staring you in the face. Find the courage to chase it♥️

    -Jamie

  • Laying It All On The Table

    Let me tell you a little about this photo… The person in this photo is me. It captured a moment of what I believe to be for myself my true happiness.

    I work in corporate America and when I am not working the rat race I get the privilege of spending my nights and weekends building up for days like this.

    So I am going to let you in on some details about what it took to find my true happiness.. The answer is in the photo.

    Starting with our farm logo sign. I designed that! It took me a few tries but Ryan and I landed on this logo. I love graphic design I even went to college for it and trust and believe I had the piles of student loan debt to prove it. 

    The EBT signage on the table, now I didn’t design that I just spent time researching if it is something we could take here at the farm. I spent time filling out the application and going through the training. It was precious time well spent.

    The vegetables on the table. This is mid way through the market. We had quite a bit left still but what you didn’t see is the time spent growing these amazing vegetables. The time spent figuring out our crop plan that previous winter, the time spent learning how to grow them within the best possible conditions. That is by far my favorite part.. figuring out how to make the best of the best. The countless very early mornings before our corporate careers start, the late nights after work and weekends preparing our market garden plots, planting, and then the harvest days. You may just see a table of vegetables but let me tell you it is so much more than that. It is our belief that we can build something around what truly makes us happy and make it sustainable. One day I know that when someone asks what we do for a living and trust me we are asked often… We can give them a very simple and short answer of we are farmers.

    Lastly, let’s talk about me..with a cheesy grin, an old Cubs hat which will always be my favorite, and a peace sign. That is my true self shining through. I like others have my insecurities and sometimes fight with the inner violence of not being good enough within myself even though I am reminded every day by Ryan of how amazing he thinks I am. The peace sign for me is selfishly a reminder to myself that inner peace is my key to staying strong no matter what is thrown my way.

    I have found true happiness being on this farm. I no longer need validation. 

    Moral of the story is… Have the courage to lay it all out on the table… not for them but for you ✌🏼

    -Jamie

    http://www.madacrefarms.com

  • The Strength Behind Us

    Sometimes looking back is exactly what you need to find the strength to move forward.

    To say we’ve poured countless hours into this garden plot would be an understatement. It’s more than a piece of land to us—it’s a place filled with blood, sweat, and tears. And if I’m being honest, it’s the very ground that tested us, broke us down, and somehow made us stronger.

    Ryan and I work from home, so we’re together nearly 100% of the time. This wasn’t always the case. It started when we moved back to Iowa, a decision that changed everything. Working side by side has its challenges, and if you’ve ever been in this position, you know what I mean. These moments can either break you or make you stronger. For us, this farm—this plot—has made us bulletproof.

    The truth is, this garden didn’t start with both of us on the same page. It was Ryan’s vision, his project, his baby. That first year? I was there, but not really there. I helped when asked, but I wasn’t fully bought in. I doubted. I questioned. I didn’t see what he saw. And the garden? Well, let’s just say it reflected that disconnect. The weeds won that year. They outgrew every crop, swallowing up any chance of success. We found two cheap greenhouses, threw them up halfheartedly, and did almost nothing with them.

    We weren’t working together—we were working against each other.

    Then, one day, something shifted. I don’t know why or how, but it did. I saw Ryan out there, pouring everything he had into that garden. I stood there watching him, and for the first time, I truly saw him. I saw the passion, the drive, the need he had to make this work. And in that moment, I realized this wasn’t a phase. This was who he was.

    That moment changed everything. Not just for the garden, but for us.

    I started showing up—not just physically but mentally, emotionally. I got out of my own way, let go of my ego, and trusted Ryan to lead. It wasn’t easy, but it was necessary.

    The next year, we tackled that plot together, both fully invested. And let me tell you, it wasn’t perfect. We still had disagreements, moments where we didn’t see eye to eye. But we always found common ground. Together, we turned an inefficient, unstable, unstructured patch of weeds into a thriving, functional, and beautiful garden.

    This garden became more than just a plot of land. It became proof. Proof that when you work together, trust each other, and believe in something bigger than yourself, you can turn chaos into something extraordinary.

    We went from fragile to bulletproof—and the garden stands as a testament to that transformation.

    Moral of the story: It’s not always about you. Sometimes, the real power comes in leaning into the meaning of us. I’m just grateful I realized it sooner rather than later.

    -❤️✌🏼Jamie
    www.madacrefarms.com

  • Building A Dream.. One Garden Bed At A Time

    The very first thing we did on this farm to build an income was create a market garden.

    I thought to myself that’s easy enough just plant a seed and it grows. Boy was I wrong!

    We both work full-time jobs during the day. What I didn’t realize was the minute we decided to purchase a farm and strive to make it a working farm my life would change drastically.

    The farm is our second full-time job. We miss out on a lot of events because what we have going on here at the farm. Admittedly at first it was hard for me to understand because I wasn’t putting in my fullest effort. As I started to commit more time to the farm I realized why it matters so much and the reward it brings even though we may miss out on things because someone has to be home to assist the animals or tend to the garden or be at a market. The pure joy this farm brings outweighs anything thrown at it.

    I remember it was our second market garden season and Ryan spent countless hours n the winter researching and watching video after video on building the perfect garden beds.. When springtime rolled around he had a plan. We took two weeks off of work and focused strictly on the market garden. We purchased compost which was now looking back far too expensive and not worth it, but the big names were doing it so we needed to as well. What was often not disclosed on those big name videos is the cost of the product coming in. For us little farmers spending a good chunk of money on compost was a big deal. We soon learned it was a nice to have and not a need to have as there are other alternatives out there.

    We spent so much time getting our garden beds perfect like in the videos we watched to spend the entire season day and night weeding them. This was all part of the process of building a successful market garden. Except we thought it was an instant process. What we didn’t realize is that it took those very successful market gardeners years to perfect. We got so caught up in the perfect that we became discouraged at our leaps of progress.

    That season was a pretty successful year once we stopped to look back at how far we have came. 

    If I can offer a piece of advice it would be not to get caught up in comparison. I have found that you sometimes envy those who may not show the challenges and struggles they went through to get where they are at. It can often paralyze your progress. 

    The following season we ran into some struggles because we fell into that rut again of watching and doing but we recognized it and dug our way back out to end with a successful season.

    This next season we are doing what is best for our farm our way!

    Moral of the story…. Sometimes things may not be what they seem. Build your own path and never give up!

    -Jamie

    http://www.madacrefarms.com

  • Exploring Beyond Our Boundaries

    Pushing yourself outside of your comfort zone is scary. You would have never believed it from this photo. So many things going through our minds this very day… what if no one buys anything, will the community accept us? Are we doing this right? What will people think? Should we do this? These were our very fears that were trying to redirect us back to our safe space and turn that truck around that was loaded with our freshly picked produce that morning.

    As we pulled up to our first Farmers Market in 2021 we were greeted by what we now know as our local community. As we put our truck in park and started to unload, multiple vendors greeted us with introductions and offered a helping hand to setup our stand.

    That day was the day I knew coming back home to Iowa was the right choice. Although we were completely out of our comfort zone we were welcomed with such warmth from the community. It was so abundantly clear that from that day forward we needed to work harder than we have ever worked before to get it right not for us but for our community.

    We have been trying ever since.

    We continue to work on improving our skills and put everything we can into building something extraordinary here at the farm. 

    Moral of this story is don’t let your fears get in the way of achieving your goals. Sometimes going through them is the only way♥️ so glad we didn’t turn that truck around that day.

    -Jamie

    http://www.madacrefarms.com

  • Any Means Necessary

    I remember this day like it was yesterday… We had both just gotten off work I was wrapping up a few things in the house. Ryan was no where to be found. As I stepped outside I heard loud banging.. I of course followed the sound to find Ryan with his sledgehammer doing what he could to break up concrete we recently had someone pull up so we could fix our water spigot. It was an absolute impossible task it seemed… and I at the time couldn’t understand why in the world he was even trying.

    As the weeks went on the pile became smaller until we were down to oversized slabs of concrete. He actually made a dent in what seemed to be an impossible task. He never gave up. 

    I would often ask Ryan why don’t we see if we can pay someone to help. I would get a similar response every time… we don’t have the money to spend on this right now. This farm has more important things we need to invest in and we can do this one concrete slab at a time. So I stopped asking and picked up a sledgehammer..

    Moral of the story…Perception is everything… Pick up a sledgehammer and move those mountains 🏔️

    -Jamie

    http://www.madacrefarms.com

  • We Bought An Extreme Home Makeover House

    If I am being honest… this house was not our first choice, it wasn’t really our second. 

    We had moved around the country a bit for our careers. Then of course 2020 hit us like a ton of bricks. My job turned virtual and Ryan already had the ability to work anywhere in the country. Ryan had a dream of owning a farm from the moment I met him. Over the last few years the fire for this passion grew to a point where he could no longer deny it. He told me it was time to come back home to Iowa. 

    We put the house up for sale in the summer of 2020 in Colorado (which I absolutely loved!) Colorado was my state but I knew what we needed to do. The house sold in two days. 

    We were on a mission to find the perfect farm back home in Iowa. We put so many offers in and came up with nothing. Time was running out until we came across what we thought was the perfect property 16 acres and a pond! It was a little above the price we wanted to spend but we went for it and the offer was accepted! At that point I just knew everything was going to be okay…

    As time grew closer to the move things were not progressing like they should be. We were finishing up our move from Colorado and we still hadn’t completed the final steps to purchase the home in Iowa… We ended up moving to Iowa putting our things in storage and separating our animals among our family’s homes and rented a house from a friend. Needless to say that house fell through and we were devastated. Thank goodness at this point our son was off doing his own thing and we were newly empty nesters.

    We started our home search again and looked at farm after farm. Then this oversized home in the middle of nowhere came across our path. We had no idea what it was at the time all we knew was it was bigger than we needed and a little further out than we wanted to be..

    I remember the moment I saw the property. I looked at Ryan and said this is it. It had a greenhouse a large historical barn, what more could you ask! We of course were informed at that time of the background on the home but that didn’t matter to me we had just went through hell with the last farm we tried to purchase. I didn’t disclose all the horrible details about our experience but one day I will have the courage to share it.  So back to the Extreme Home Makeover. We bought it!

    We actually bought it in the middle of Winter. We got acclimated to the quarks of the home very quickly. The home fit its title well. Everything about it was extreme. We were new to rural living, we had no idea about propane. Our home in Colorado used natural gas and we had a gas fireplace that I loved! This home also had a gas fireplace! It was a win win for me! At least I thought! I remember we had just filled our 500 gallon propane tank and not even a month later it needed refilled.. I was running that fireplace nonstop and the furnace was running nonstop. We soon discovered that we needed to put in some major work on making this home energy efficient. We have been working on that ever since! We tore out that gas fireplace and installed a wood stove. That has been a game changer! This home needs a lot of updates including windows, siding and a new roof. We will not be acquiring new debt to upkeep this home so we do small increments of improvements. Baby steps people and I am absolutely okay with that approach!

    I would like to switch gears a bit and talk about our neighbors. I will share more about the home in future blogs!

    I remember thinking we are way out here in rural Iowa and everyone probably keeps to themselves..
    I remember getting a knock on the door one early Spring day. It was what we now know to be one of the most kind, loving and supportive human beings in our lives. He was just stopping by to introduce himself. We were so glad he stopped by that day, it gave us the feeling of belonging.

    Soon after that Ryan almost set the barn on fire trying to clear overgrown weeds. I was so upset with him…I remember him making a frantic call to our neighbor as he was previously on the fire department, we didn’t know it at the time but he contacted our other neighbor who was also on the fire department and they were there in minutes putting out the fire with a garden hose😂. That moment was a pivotal moment that we were not aware of at that time but it broke the ice. Our two neighbors showed up for us within seconds of a call and they continue to show up for us to this day.

    One of our neighbors recently shared a picture with Ryan that he took back in 2006 during the Extreme Home Makeover build and it happened to have Ryan in the photo. Back in our earlier years Ryan worked a second job at Home Depot and he volunteered to help at this very home. Little did he know at the time he was helping to build his forever home.

    Sometimes this house can be very overwhelming along with what we have going on to rebuild the farm. When those moments come up I gravitate to the people in our lives cheering us on which happen to be our neighbors whom happen to be our biggest supporters! They give us the encouragement to keep going and offer us sound advice and a helping hand. If I am being honest here… there are times that I want to throw in the towel but remember what type of community we live in and couldn’t imagine not living next to some pretty amazing people who we now call family ♥️

    Moral of the story… You never know what life has in store for you. Sometimes the best things in life come from the hardest of times.

    -Jamie

    http://www.madacrefarms.com

  • The Fence That Fuels Our Fire

    Sometimes, the projects that seem the most pointless can leave the deepest mark on your heart.

    When Ryan suggested putting up a decorative fence around our bee hives, I couldn’t wrap my head around it. A fence? Around bees? It wasn’t going to keep them in, and it just felt like one of those projects destined to eat up time we didn’t have. But as with so many things in life, the real purpose of that fence wasn’t what I thought.

    Let me tell you a little about Ryan—he’s frugal to the core, and that mindset has carried us through some of the toughest financial times of our lives. He’d planned this fence for months, scouting materials, finding deals, and eventually landing on a Craigslist listing that sparked his interest.

    One crisp fall morning, we hopped in the truck and drove north to pick it up. Along the way, we passed this massive, awe-inspiring greenhouse—the kind of place that makes you start dreaming out loud. What if we could have something like that? What could we grow? What could we build?

    When we arrived at our destination, we found exactly what we needed: the perfect fence. But the real treasure came from talking to the family selling it. They showed us their lush garden with towering Amish Paste tomatoes trellised so simply, yet so beautifully. As we talked, they casually asked if we’d like to see their greenhouse. Ryan and I locked eyes, our excitement barely contained, and practically shouted, “Yes!”

    Turns out, that greenhouse we had been daydreaming about on the drive? It was theirs. And stepping inside felt like walking into a dream. Rows of vibrant, healthy plants grown hydroponically, the entire operation run with such care and ingenuity—it was breathtaking.

    That greenhouse became a spark for us. A vision of what’s possible, a reminder of the potential we hold if we keep pushing forward.

    Now, every time I see that little decorative fence around our bee hives, I smile. It’s not just a fence anymore. It’s a symbol of that fall morning, of inspiration found in the most unexpected places, and of the reminder that even the smallest steps can lead to the biggest dreams.

    Moral of the story: The simplest, most unexpected moments can bring you life-changing inspiration. Don’t rush past them—embrace them. You never know what they’ll unlock. 🌿✨

    -❤️✌🏼Jamie

    www.madacrefarms.com

  • Team Work Makes The Dream Work!

    Let the record show… I was 100% against the capturing of this bee swarm.. I may not have showed it on camera that day but inside I was screaming HELP ME!!

    Ryan started his bee journey when we lived in CO and it was an instant hobby for him. He actually brought his hives with him from CO… and when I say brought them he literally had them in the cab of the UHaul with him.. it is because of that I knew I had to be his partner in crime this day regardless of the outcome I was there for it.

    I got stung a handful of times after he cut a branch where the bees were resting. As soon as that branch started to drop I did what any normal person would do and run… I admit I didn’t wait for Ryan even though he was afraid of heights it was every Madison for themselves… I of course was the one that the bees took it out on and I was too cool for a bee suit. After that little incident I threw on an extra suit cause I couldn’t fathom getting stung again. I mean I couldn’t out run them.. trust me I tried..

    We ended up capturing two swarms that day. It took the entire day but at the end of the season we harvested close to 100lbs of honey. Had that swarm got away we would not of gotten the outcome we did with our honey.

    Moral of the story… Show up for the people in your world no matter how crazy it may seem or how far out of your comfort zone you feel… You never know what kind of blessing will come from it. Oh! And never try to out run a bee 🐝 #teamwork

    -Jamie

    www.madacrefarms.com

Featured

The Vegetable Farmer

Just a small town girl with nothing to lose and everything to gain. That was my mindset as I entered early adulthood. That mindset got me to where I am at today. I remember feeling stuck and scared that I was going to be put in a box. A box that capped my highest potential and I blamed that on the environment I grew up in.

I blamed Iowa…I blamed Iowa for the constant reminder of not having much as a kid . The tap on the shoulder that wouldn’t let me move on from the life I grew up around surrounded by what seemed to be the never ending cycle of financial hardship. Let’s be honest here if you know what it is like to barely make ends meet and then you happen to run into some luck every once in a while… that luck doesn’t last long at all. Most of the time that luck is equated to dollar bills and you blow it as fast as you can get it. That was the environment I was accustomed to. So as a young adult I was suffocating from the thoughts of following in those same footsteps… so I left Iowa.

I uprooted my family on pure faith. A little history about us was that we bought our first home on the east side of Waterloo. Ryan loved that house. It was the first house we made a home. We had amazing neighbors who quickly became like family to us. I remember the day I left our first home and vowed never to look back. I left by myself to start a new life in the Chicagoland area. All while Ryan finished packing up our old life so I could get a jump start on our new life. This was how things went for us for 8 years. Moving to states where we were the closest family we had. Man.. I thought I was the risk taker in the relationship… what took me a long time to realize was it was my husband and son who held the highest stakes. They bet everything on me.. literally.

The move back to Iowa wasn’t my idea. I quite honestly was against it.. I realize now it was out of fear of being put back into that same box. But life for me is always about bets and risks. I grew up around bets and risks so that only makes sense except this time I felt I had everything to lose. Deep within I knew it was time I bet on my family.

Iowa welcomed us back with open arms. I just wasn’t prepared for what Iowa had in store for us. It changed me…

Iowa woke me up from what I believed was the best I could do. It continues to show me there is so much more to life. I just can’t believe it came in the form of a vegetable garden.

Less than 5 years ago I wanted to climb the corporate ladder. The goal was to reach the highest rung on the ladder I could. Now.. I realize life’s truest potential isn’t about boardrooms and corporate engagement meetings. It’s about finding complete happiness and holding on to it.

This farm has taught me so much about myself in such a short period of time. This isn’t a phase.. I understand now why they say farmers are some of the happiest people alive. It’s because they figured out that life doesn’t have to be over complicated. Life is best lived when you silence the noise of chaos and choose simple.

So yeah.. I would risk it all to be a vegetable farmer. It is abundantly clear on exactly what I need to do these days.

Moral of the story… Sometimes those boxes we find ourselves put in are the boxes we packed ourselves. It’s time to unpack. -✌🏼Jamie

Featured

Surface Level

Farming is definitely not my second language and I don’t claim it to be..at least not yet. Farming is however an unexpected passion that I get to share with people I love.

When I tell you I have a lot to learn … I truly am like a child growing up again learning a completely different view on life.

I remember a couple of seasons ago Ryan had purchased strawberry roots to plant for hanging baskets. People… you would have thought we won the lottery! I was obsessed with the idea of having strawberries growing out of baskets hanging up everywhere around the farm. What I realized was I was so obsessed with the idea of it that I didn’t actually educate myself on how to make it happen. It was so surface level for me. I even made a video that showed how I clearly planted them incorrectly. I unintentionally was suffering from the insecurities of me not being an expert but trying to prove to everyone even myself that I knew what I was doing..

I of course discovered I planted them incorrectly and fixed some of them. I did however still have them planted incorrectly and didn’t care for them the way I should have and they didn’t grow well.

What I should have done was find a hanging basket that was at least 12-14 inches in diameter. Fill it with some good planting soil/compost mix, peat-free if possible because strawberries do not like to sit in water. Then dash it with some blood/bone meal to provide a boost. Doing all of this while my strawberry roots were soaking for 4-6 hours.

Then… plant them root side down, with the crown of the strawberry sticking out of the dirt! See the last time, I planted it sideways and on top of that I buried the poor thing and it either didn’t grow or was slow to grow. Then I would consistently water every 1-2 days. Some people might ask why not just get strawberry plant starts to use instead? Have you seen the price of those things! Why not get a bag of 25 roots for $15-$20 vs one plant for $5 or an already established hanging basket for $20. That was and still is our rationale.

Much like my strawberry story I have approached life at times from a very surface level perspective.. Life can be so much more than that.

Is there something in your life that maybe you have not put in forth the effort to make it successful because it may require the idea of facing a fear of failure or having to admit you are not an expert? Or what about having to take extra time to learn more about something you are not an expert on before jumping head first into the pit of the unknowns.

What I have discovered is I needed to fail fast and fail often because that for me creates growth on so many levels and humility. It also gives me insight to realize what truly makes me happy even if I am not great at it I continue to try. It’s the reassurance that I am on the right path.

I still posted that strawberry video.. I was humble about my mistake. I also later realized that I still did it wrong. So this year I am going to try again just for me and be okay with failure if it happens again.

One of these days you are going to stumble on a blog from a woman who finally figured out that life isn’t just surface level. That sometimes you have to dig a little deeper to find your own gold. She will be surrounded by hanging baskets of strawberries in abundance. Until then she is going to keep digging and sharing her gold as she discovers it.

Moral of the story… Failure is brutal sometimes.. Can you imagine a life where you always win? Those are lives of comfort zones. Here’s to failing fast and failing often. It’s time to be uncomfortable.-✌🏼Jamie

Featured

2 Week Notice

How epic would that be if you were reading my official two week notice right at this very moment.. Would you think to yourself good for her or maybe even think about your current situation and contemplating the same?

For the record this is not my official notice. At least not yet. Don’t get me wrong chucking up the ✌🏼to corporate America is a goal that I don’t mind letting people know about.

The Powerball was at a billion dollars not too long ago. I told my team that if I won to not judge me but I would not be giving a notice. I would however make it up to them by paying off their houses and cars so they could focus more on what makes them happy vs working to pay off debt.

Ryan and I of course talked about what we would do if we won. It wouldn’t be taking lavish trips or buying fancy things. It would quite honestly be just building on to what we currently have after we bless people in our lives. We would be the type of folks where we would not speak about it but there definitely would be signs here at the farm. Things would get done a little quicker around here!

That truly got me thinking… if that is what it took for me not to give any notice. What would it take for me to give a two week notice. The truth is… I started to look at more than just my career. What am I hanging on to that is holding us back from achieving more happiness that I can give a notice to?

I started to apply this mindset to everything. I look at the two week notice as a form of giving myself grace while I change the way I look at things.

For example, it is unbelievably difficult sometimes for me not to always take lead. I came from a very strong woman that showed me if you want it done right do it yourself. What I have discovered is all that really means is, that if you want it done your way do it yourself. I found that when I stepped back and let others do the same task their way the task still gets done. In some circumstances it gets done better. I also found that it brings forth growth. I am knocking down this mindset one notice at a time.

Working full time during the day and then immediately jumping into the farm at night can sometimes be a little challenging for me to switch gears to not having to take lead on everything and letting my husband take the rope. He is the one who has really put in the research on this master plan of ours!

Think about that for a moment. Is your dynamic with your significant other something where there are certain things you each take lead on? Have you had a situation where you both took lead? We have that a lot and what I find out is the rope is too short and we both have to take steps back in order to have enough vs holding the rope while the other one ties it and we keep moving forward together.

It is a daily struggle for me. The pandemic changed a lot of our dynamics. Before we had quite a bit of space between us. Nowadays we don’t go a day apart. We had to learn how to work better as a team. We learned that very quickly at this farm. Things get extremely difficult if we are moving in the opposite direction.

We are both very strong and stubborn individuals and most of the time it’s me just not wanting to let go of that leadership mentality. I am constantly working on shifting that mindset. From a control freaks perspective it is so unbelievably hard.. I am that person sitting in the passenger seat saying the light is green… or there is a car coming 😊. Do you know someone like that? Is that person you?

I think for me when I make incremental shifts of letting go life gets a little easier. When I find myself reverting back to that space I take a moment to reset, show myself grace, and then try again. A lot of self coaching going on inside of this head of mine. That’s why giving certain mindsets that feed on stress and anxiety a two week notice has become my priority.

Moral of the story… It’s time to give a 2 week notice on whatever is holding you back – ✌🏼 Jamie

Featured

Gravel Roads

There is a lot you can learn from gravel roads… I mean a lot..Did you know that roughly 60% of Iowa’s public roads are gravel? How often do you hear someone say they don’t take gravel? Think about that for a minute. That means that they have a 60% chance of missing out on some great treasures that happen to be placed on one of those very gravel roads.

Our farm happens to be off a gravel road. There is actually no way you can get to our farm unless you take gravel. Now there are routes that offer you less gravel travel but in some way you will have to take gravel to get to the farm.

I use to be one of those people that if I could avoid a gravel road I would. I just never realized what I was missing until I came back home to Iowa. These Iowa gravel roads have taught me quite a bit in just our short time being back home.

I have learned that when a road sign states unmaintained you definitely do not want to take that road after a heavy rain or snow storm.. I have heard stories about those unmaintained roads where I will not mention any names but are often the locals to the rescue with their tractors pulling out the brave souls from their mistakes of taking a path less traveled… literally..

The consequence of taking that path is having to call your spouse or parents to let them know of the poor decision you made but not to worry because the locals of these gravel roads are amazing human beings with a sense of humor saved you the cost of an expensive tow bill and got you out of the sticky situation you put yourself in. For the record… I have not made that mistake yet. However, it is likely coming because I am one of those individuals who often times is up for the challenge.

But don’t worry here at the farm you got some options, there is a route right off a paved road that leads directly to our farm with about a mile of gravel on a maintained road. See what I did there 😁.

http://wwe.madacrefarms.com

I have also learned on these gravel roads that when someone drives by you wave regardless who they are or if they waved back or not. I literally will wave at everyone and feel bad if I don’t now. I can’t make this up. It has now been instilled in me that you wave at absolutely everyone. It has become such a habit now that I find myself waving at people on the paved roads and highways and at times will get puzzled looks! I don’t mind at all, and realize that the wave represents acknowledgement. I often say to myself as I wave to anyone that drives by I truly hope they are having a good day and say a little prayer asking they be lifted up. I have those kind of days myself and could only hope someone takes a brief moment in time to ask the same.

In the spring these gravel roads become like an expressway of semis and tractors. This is how the community makes a living and puts the very food on your plate. I have a new found respect and have learned to have patience for these vehicles. I will move over a little extra on the road paved or gravel to wait for them to pass by. I will give a little space between us so they can see I am behind them and wait to pass until I know it is safe. These folks spend a lot of time on these gravel roads to assure they can provide the resources they have committed to for the year and it is the least I can do to have a little patience and give a friendly wave as they pass by.

Another thing I have found is that these gravel roads lead to some pretty cool small towns. For example we live next to a small town in Iowa by the name of Lincoln. There is a paved road to Lincoln and the history runs deep. The population of this town is under 200 people. There is a sign that says Lincoln next 5 exits. It basically covers all the roads in this little town and I absolutely love that sign as it makes me smile every time I see it! 👇

This small town also has a post office that I have learned a lot visiting it every so often. One thing that I have recently learned is that we need to get a better quality rain gauge because you may be asked how much rain you got and if you were like me I didn’t have a clue.

I have always been so use to going into places and not saying anything to anyone and just handling my affairs. Never looking up or acknowledging people, just living the day to day. Boy… was I missing out. It is still a learning process for me to pause and live life a bit and take a moment to talk about the weather or talk about how much rain we got out at the farm and hear about how the postmaster is preserving her eggs she got from the farm and utilizing the comfrey we shared with her. Living here has taught me that it is okay to slow down, it has actually provided me a little more clarity on what is important in life.

This small town also has a little bar tucked away by the name of Larry’s that has some pretty great pizza that we were introduced to by one of our neighbors. Like most people we may have never knew about this place if we were not told by the locals. If you haven’t heard of this little joint I would recommend you make a point to stop by. You would be supporting local and likely hear some history about the little town while you wait for your pizza. You also would have the chance to take a photo of the road sign I was talking about and post it on your socials, which of course gives the ability to put this little treasure on the map and make for a great story!

We get the privilege of living among some pretty amazing people who are the absolute treasures of rural Iowa. I have never met a group of people who are so humble and caring and it is truly genuine. We have lived in different parts of the country and have been blessed with great people in our lives but the amount of support that we have received coming back home from the locals has been such a blessing. These amazing people have taught us a few things about rural Iowa.

I could go on for days about these gravel roads… so much I have learned and so much left to still learn. What I do know is that if you are not willing to travel somewhere because there is a gravel road you have a 60% chance of missing out on what Iowa really has to offer.

Moral of the story… take the gravel road. We did and it was the best thing we have ever done.

-✌🏼Jamie

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From Scratch

Here is what I know.. Life at times can be extremely challenging, the easy way is not always the best way, money doesn’t buy happiness, and for me ambition to climb a corporate ladder means spending more time away from family. Ironically enough defeating the entire purpose of the goal of providing a better life for my family when all it really would have taken was more focus on things that made us truly happy and made it a little less complicated which actually happened to be more time together. Crazy right!?

By far one of my biggest regrets was not realizing it sooner. I watched our son grow up in photos because I traveled so much for work.

Here we are 20 years later finally figuring out what is important. We have taken the lessons we have learned along the way and dumped them back into this big bowl of life and now rebuilding a very simple happiness. We are very much starting from scratch.

If you ask us what happiness looks like 100% hands down we would tell you we live for our nights and weekends. That is our free time to take action on our dreams. If only we would have lived a little more simpler and acquired less debt we could be spending all of our time fueling the fire of our dreams every day instead of just nights and weekends. Another life lesson.

Turning this Extreme Home Makeover house into an agritourism destination is the priority. We have spent the last three and a half years cleaning up the property. The progress is slow because in order to fuel our dreams our corporate careers are necessary. At least for a little while longer. It is discouraging some times because we feel we should be so much further along. It takes time and these days a lot of money. Remember debt free zone over here! That’s another priority for us and the farm. So if that means holding off or making adjustments to the goal to keep the purpose at the front of the line, that’s exactly what we will do. We don’t mind being intentionally broke if it means we are a step closer to reaching our goals.

Let’s unpack that a bit. In order for the farm to be sustainable it has to bring in an income. It also requires much of our free time to make that happen. That is why we carved out a space for our market garden, created a CSA, attend farmers markets and coming soon we will offer a farm stand right here on the farm. So this means starting seeds in the winter to prepare for spring. Prepping our garden for the season in early spring, creating a season extension so we can grow earlier and later in the season by adding greenhouses to the property, installing those greenhouses for the very first time, growing in them and taking all of these lessons and putting them back in the bowl to create a better garden recipe for the next season. Oh! And share all of this on our social pages when we can in efforts to keep our supporters in the loop and build excitement about what’s to come on the farm.

With building sustainability in mind we also know we need to create some form of passive income on the farm. So we stepped way out of our comfort zone…and bought a project to build a shepherd’s hut. We also know the amount of time that project takes so we jumped on another deal on a mostly completed Tiny House. We are now working on creating an inviting space on the property for it to reside along with working on making it a comfortable stay with amenities using all solar energy. This will be our future Air BnB. Eventually we will do the same with the shepherds hut.

We also understand the importance of bringing people to the property and being able to build a beautiful space where people will enjoy the scenery and want to come back because of the way it made them feel. This is why we are working on things here at the farm like the Wildflower project. We have been actively working on building micro environments for beneficial insects along with our bees by planting native wildflowers. We have been working on this space now for three years. It took quite a bit of cleaning up. This is such an undertaking considering the land it is being planted on just wasn’t taken care of for years. It will be beautiful once we perfect it and a great backdrop for the Tiny House.

Another venture we undertook here at the farm was something that really helped bring in an income for the farm. This was our pasture raised poultry. We didn’t do this last season due to predator pressures we experienced. We added additional farm security with bringing in a livestock guardian dog. He is still in a very much puppy mentality but starting to get an understanding of the job.

This is why we decided we will be offering pasture raised poultry on the farm again this season. We planted a pasture for our birds that we will graze them in mid to late summer. This took some time.. a lot of time but we learned along the way what we need to raise a healthy, happy bird.

The season before last Ryan and I did close to 200 birds on the farm with just the two of us. That season was probably the hardest I have ever worked in my life raising them while maintaining the garden, preparing for market, working our corporate careers, then getting the birds ready for our customers. Even with all of that.. it was worth it. That is why we are bringing it back.

http://www.madacrefarms.com

We also know the importance of sharing our farm with others and bringing in the community to experience the current happenings. With all of this being said, we have been blessed this year with organizations reaching out to do farm tours and most recently asking if we can host an event.

The pressure we have put on ourselves to be better than we were last year is insane. Heck the pressure to be better than yesterday is our mantra. What I have realized is that in order to find happiness we needed to live through these experiences and have the courage to mix it back into to life when we knew we could do so much better. We are determined to leave our mark on this world and won’t stop until we accomplish extraordinary.

This is going to be a better season than the last! We took last year’s lessons and mixed those back in. We hope you pull up a seat at our table to enjoy what we have to offer, trust me there is a seat for everyone. Nothing wrong with starting from scratch or should I say experience.

http://www.madacrefarms.com

Moral of the story… Starting from scratch is scary, especially when you may be half way through the recipe but was it ever really your recipe?? Have the courage to make your own♥️

-✌🏼Jamie

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What You May Not Know About The Farmer’s Market

Farmers Market season is fast approaching! We absolutely love market season. If I am being honest here it isn’t because we bring in a ton of income.. full transparency if we really wanted to get down to the facts with what it takes to grow the produce, harvest it, and then package it we are probably less than $5/hr. This also doesn’t include the travel time to sell at the market or the time we spend at the market. So in other words we don’t do it because we are getting rich off of it.. we do it because it provides us purpose and joy.

Please keep that in mind when you are scrolling on your socials and see there is a post about a local farmers market. Engage in that post, give it a like, a share and tag a friend. Ultimately what you are endorsing is supporting your small farmers, bakers, and crafters who found their purpose. These folks likely gave up their nights and weekends to provide a product they believe in at your local market.

What you also may not realize are the groups of people who take time to organize the market spending countless hours creating social posts, recruiting new vendors, brainstorming activities to draw a crowd so they can build something positive for their community while trying to promote foot traffic within the local area. There are times where these market committees are not vendors which means they are community members who are dedicating unpaid time to create something positive for families to enjoy because they see the value in having these types of community building events.

I never really thought about any of this until we became vendors. I then started to see the passion that runs through these markets to make them a success. I have also seen the disappointment in everyone when the anticipated turnout just didn’t happen. What I have learned is the market is only as strong as its community support.

At the smaller markets we attend I will say we don’t see a lot of young adults. I often wonder if it’s just timing or if there is a way to get young adults to stop out. I also wonder if people pass their local market to go to a bigger market? Maybe not realizing that with their support they could turn their small town market into a popular place and keep their community dollars local. People will take time to drive if they feel the value is worth the effort. That was an ah-ha moment for me… what can Mad Acre Farms do to help support our local markets right!? What can we do to promote farm foot traffic? At that moment I realized we need to up our game and selling produce may not bring in the crowd but how we sell produce and the experience you get when you come to our table or farm could change that.

Let me leave you with this.. a typical work week market day for us looks like this.

The day prior before our corporate careers begin in the morning we walk the garden and determine what we are going to take. The next day we wake up early to get a jump on harvest. We have multiple markets and if it falls on a work day we are working twice as hard to get harvest done before our corporate careers start. During the end of the work day we are multitasking loading the vehicle with our freshly picked produce. I of course find myself after hours while loading our truck taking work calls. Once the truck is loaded we take care of the farm.. fresh water and feeding time. By this time we are at go time. We hustle to the market 5 minutes before the whistle blows and a very loyal vendor who we now call family without hesitation rushes to help us get setup. Sometimes we beat that whistle and sometimes we don’t… Talk about anxiety for me when we don’t…

The moments we don’t make the whistle are the times where I wonder if we are just crazy for even trying.. Then it happens, like clockwork, we have amazing supportive people waiting patiently for us from the community. If only they knew our hearts are racing out of our chests and we just finished up a stressful day at work but that all goes away when we get our first customer purchasing that freshly picked produce from our table! It’s just a friendly reminder to us of the why and a gentle nudge that gives us a sense of purpose♥️

Want to make an impact on your community? Check out your local farmers market.. even if you think it may not be for you. Trust me you will never know if you don’t go! If you are a farmers market supporter already, thank you it means the world to us!

Moral of the story… This is an easy one.. support local ♥️

✌🏼-Jamie

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He Does The Cooking

Give credit where credit is due. I will be the first to admit cooking is not one of my best talents. Ryan does the majority of the cooking in our house. Trust me it is for both of our safety.

To be honest I was and have always been a little rough around the edges and a little more tomboy like. I am also in a career that is predominantly a male environment. Maybe this ties into how I grew up. If I could place any blame here… I blame my three brothers. Where ever they were I was with them. Catching tadpoles, snapping turtles or even peeing on electric fences, don’t worry I didn’t do that but was right there when it happened rolling on the dirty ground laughing hysterically with my brothers… a story for another day.

However, the super hero in my story growing up will always be my mother. She still to this day is the strongest woman I know. As a child I don’t have many memories of cooking but the memories I do have are the multiple jobs she had at one time so she could put food on the table. I remember her coming home throwing something together for all of us and then heading to her next job. That was her super power. Making it work.

I am not sure how she did it but she would always find time to make us feel special on our birthdays and make us our favorite meal. Mine always was acorn squash. I don’t know what it was about the way my mother cooked it but I couldn’t duplicate it. The recipe is very basic with just butter and brown sugar. I tried for years to make it taste the way she made it.. I finally realized it wasn’t the recipe that made it taste so amazing.. it was the way it made me feel.

I now look back and wish I would have taken more interest in learning the skill and yes it is a fantastic skill to have. I am now in my 40 something’s starting at the very basics. I feel cooking requires an unbelievable amount of discipline and patience.. Two things that challenge me to this day. If I am not great at something I find a way to self sabotage and pump myself up on how it’s not going to work out and only give it a fraction of my effort. And… guess what happens.. it of course doesn’t turn out.

I am also the individual in the family dedicated to bringing the eating utensils at any family gathering instead of a dish. Everyone knows my cooking abilities.

Stepping into this farm world and this life of homesteading I realize the importance of utilizing what you have to its fullest ability. That means learning how to cook the food we grow and having the ability to share that with others. I also think there is a balance for a person like me as well. Meaning I don’t necessarily love the kitchen because it doesn’t love me. I would much rather be outside playing in the dirt. Why can’t I have both!? And.. be great at them?

After a bit of self reflection I have discovered that I can in fact have both. I just need to put in the work up front and make time. However, time these days for anyone is so precious. I would imagine that most can relate to not having enough time to cook if you have a full household of activities or maybe over demanding jobs/careers that you give everything you got and have nothing left at the end of the day. Trust me I can relate in so many ways…

I have started to realize that if I slow down for just a few seconds I can find time to make quick meals with what we have and still have time to do the things I enjoy more. Now I am not great yet at cooking.. did you catch the word yet!? It was because I was focusing on the wrong meals that didn’t work for me and my lifestyle.

This year it is my goal to master quick meal prep using very simple recipes that I don’t have to spend too much time or resources on in the kitchen. I am also sharing some of these recipes on our website that I have or will be trying this season.

https://www.madacrefarms.com/maf-recipe

My ultimate goal is to find quick ways to eat great food grown using sustainable practices and not have to spend all my time in the kitchen. I am determined to figure out what works and share it with anyone who is interested.

Moral of the story… You are who you are.. be proud of that. It is likely that you had a super hero in your story who handed you their cape. Own it, make it better and then pass it on.

-✌🏼Jamie

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Crooked Smile

There is a certain kind of power that comes with having confidence. As a child growing up that continued on as a young adult the only thing I was confident of was the confidence I lacked.. Back then I had an unbelievably crooked smile. This carried on until shortly after I graduated high school. My family could not afford to pay for braces and I do not ever remember asking for them because I already knew it just wasn’t financially possible.

I look back on all my photos growing up and see a very unconfident girl with a closed mouth smile or a partial smile. I remember absolutely hating picture day because the expectation was a smile showing your teeth..and I was terrified of having to see that memory captured and hung on a wall.

Just before college started I remember going to our local dentist and asking her if I could setup a payment plan for her to fix my smile. Looking back I was a risky bet.. but she without any hesitation agreed and changed my life on the outside. Little did I know I still needed quite a bit of work on the inside…

I sometimes feel myself going back into that space of not being confident especially with the things we are now tackling at the farm. To me it is so unbelievably uncomfortable to walk into a room full of farmers or joining a farmers market and just be at the beginning stages of the game while it feels everyone else is well beyond that point. It almost feels like an exhibit full of pictures and the only one’s hanging are my crooked smile. These are my inner fears resurfacing of not being good enough..

I think this is where the art of comparison tags itself in and takes a seat at our already full table. I start to compare what we have accomplished to others who may or may not have been in the game longer. The feeling of suck less do better consumes me. It always seems to happen at the most inopportune time.

What I started to realize is that I was going through life fixing my outside thinking it was fixing my inside. I would buy the fanciest things we could afford and move us to areas across the country that I thought would create happiness. If things looked great on the outside they must be great on the inside right… It wasn’t until we moved back home and I started to realize that I didn’t really have a need for fancy things anymore and where we lived the truest value comes from your character and grit.. boy what a wake up call to realize you have to dig a little deeper and realize it’s time to work on the inside that actually fixes the outside to build that true confidence.

For us we have had to learn everything on this farm from a brand new perspective. This meant we were starting over. It was quite literally a new beginning for us. Our son graduated and moved out. Ryan and I were navigating life as empty nesters and embarking on this farm journey. In the beginning it was extremely difficult to not give up.

One of the biggest things we had to understand was that we could not compare ourselves to others because we would 100% lose every time in our eyes. We were and still are our own biggest critics. For example.. it took us quite a bit of time to build our goat paddock we just couldn’t get it to meet our perfect. So we just continued to work at it even on days we felt less than mediocre. Six months later we finally finished it, and without a doubt it may not meet some folks standard of perfect but it is perfect for us. Or spending months learning how to use a commercial vinyl cutter Ryan purchased when we moved to this farm because he had more faith in myself than I did to use it to create a potential income for the farm. That thing sat for two years until I was finally sick of looking at it and told myself I was going to figure it out. It took me months to learn it it. I am actually still figuring out the things I can make with it. I would go to bed at midnight only to wake up at 3 AM to get back at it to make farm merchandise. Then mustering up all the courage I had to post about it to only learn now we need to work on our marketing game! So now that is what I am working on these days.

The cause

It is difficult not to fall back into the comparison game and come up with a million reasons why the outcome isn’t as we predicted it to be and give up but we don’t. We don’t because we are different than what we were as two young adults meeting in the lobby at Kirkwood Community College who had absolutely no idea what we wanted out of life and have grown in ways I can’t explain nor would have ever imagined.

Don’t get me wrong there is a lot of fixing to do.. I mean a lot but there is nothing more humbling to look back and say we did that and then grab each other’s hand and say come on we got a ways to go.

So yes when you get caught up in the merry go round of comparison you need to work the courage up to jump off while that thing is still spinning.

Moral of the story..Crooked smile or not.. own your confidence even on your most unconfident days. Trust me…even the most confident people aren’t as strong as you think.

✌🏼-Jamie

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The Farm Tour

They say if you do what you love you never work a day in your life.. I never really fully understood what this quote meant until our very first farm tour.

Farming isn’t our full time gig. Ryan and I work in corporate America with the flexibility of work from home careers. This right now is what fuels our farm. Some might be thinking you both work from home which means you are together almost 100% of the time. Yes, yes we are. He is my best friend and we sometimes finish each other’s sentences and yes we get on each other’s nerves. We are also the driving force behind each other’s goals.

What does this have to do with the very experience we had together that made me put in my two weeks notice to my old mindset?

Everything… it was the summer of 2022 this was the 2nd year of us participating in the Reinbeck’s farmers market. The market thought it would be a great opportunity to get the community involved by giving them a glimpse into their local gardeners and specialty crop grower’s worlds. They were absolutely right!

We at that time were just two years in on owning our property that needed so much work and still does. This farm tour catapulted our drive to take action faster. I remember waking up before our corporate careers began and going 100mph in the morning working until our alarm’s went off letting us know we had 15 minutes to commute to our desk jobs. We would do the same thing on our lunch break and as soon as we wrapped up our corporate day we were hitting the soil until it was too dark to see what we were doing. We were loving every minute of it even though we were worn down and so unbelievably sore.

When the date arrived for the farm tour I can honestly say we were less than ready although we were working so hard every day to a point our bodies could barely move. We knew we had so much more in the works. Ryan and I talked about what we were going to say and how we were going to give the tour on a very unready farm.

I remember people started to show up and Ryan was no where to be found. I had to go find him.

What you didn’t know on that day was that Ryan doesn’t do crowds. He gets anxious and avoids those situations at all costs. He worked up the courage and I took lead. What you may not have known about me is that I was barely getting my feet wet in the farm scene and you were experiencing the tour through my very unsteady confidence in what we were doing. I later found Ryan in the tour sharing his vision with the crowd with no anxiousness or nervousness. His vision was just rolling off the tongue as he was smiling and laughing with our community. That was such an incredible sight to see. Considering less than an hour prior he was clamming up on me.

Seeing all the people that day not really caring that we were not experts but just genuinely engaged in our vision of the property and seeing the work we were putting in to make this property what it should be was something that changed everything for us. Right then and there I was bought into the vision.

We walked the community through the plans for the property and one of them happened to be the barn project. We were selling shirts that day and the community was there for it. The money for the shirts all went into the barn project. It took us two years to get the barn moved but it was a feeling of accomplishment because we told our community that was part of the plan. We have so much work to do on this property it is overwhelming. The property looks completely different than what it did on that farm tour.

We will be offering a farm tour this season to share our progress! We will also be participating in Reinbeck Farmers Market Garden Tour this season. I don’t necessarily know that we have had an opportunity to thank the amazing people who setup that tour for Reinbeck that year or really shared the impact that the community had on us that day but you changed our world. We have not stopped working towards those goals we shared since that day.

So yes it is so unbelievably true.. You never work a day in your life if you love what you do!

Moral of the story.. You often find exactly what you need on the most unsteady path. Find the courage to take that path, you never know where it will lead you and who you will meet along the way. ✌🏼- Jamie

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Shiny Things

If I had the opportunity to give the 20 year old me advice that would have changed the way I live for the better in my now 40 somethings… I would tell myself this.

Don’t be fascinated by other people’s glitter because it may not be your gold.

Say no to those credit cards they pushed down your throat when you were in the common gathering areas in college. along with not falling into the trap of comparison and insecurities seeing all the beautiful girls wearing the fancy clothes that made you question your value and had you go to those same retail stores and apply for those credit cards and max them out the same day so you felt you were worth something. Trust me you won’t find self worth in material things.

Don’t take out those extra students loans you don’t need because it will take you 20 years to pay them off and you find yourself rotating debt around to pay for itself.

If only I wasn’t so distracted by those shiny things. Ryan has always been the grounded one out of us. He has always been my checks and balances. He has been the one saying we need to chase financial freedom. I never really cared to ask more until about 4 years ago. I am now more so than ever very much aware of what things cost.

We don’t need brand new cars.. the best car hands down is one that is paid for.

I don’t wear fancy clothes.

We quite frankly are intentionally broke. Not even kidding on this and I couldn’t be more happier. The end goal is in sight.

We have been extremely focused on paying off debt and made a commitment that we won’t acquire new debt.. Had we of been on the same page 20 years ago we both would have been retiring and having the ability to work our dream job full time right now.

If you are reading this, there is no better time than now to start. We started to take the approach if we can’t pay for it we save for it and have not looked back since.

Don’t get me wrong. It’s tough to hear about people taking fancy trips and not want to splurge because we feel we deserve it. Or seeing the latest and greatest in things…but at the end of the day someone else’s situation is likely not your same situation or if they were anything like me back in the day it’s a smoking mirror.

I have learned that money doesn’t buy happiness.. it buys things. It is a short term high, then the regret sets in. Happiness doesn’t live in glitz and glitter.. it lives in grit and purpose. Don’t forget that. We found exactly that on this farm. Now we are living our dream nights and weekends. If only my younger self knew what was in store for my older self I would be sharing with you the full time dream..

If you are a young adult reading this.. trust me you will thank me when you are reaching your 40’s and not working that 9-5 because you lived well below your means and stacked your paper and retiring earlier than the rest of the people your age.

Moral of the story.,. Don’t be fooled by those shiny things or those who have them. The true gold is time, and as you get older it will make more sense. I mean that is after all how we truly pay for things if you really think about it.

✌🏼Jamie

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The Wake Up Call From Rural Iowa

There is absolutely nothing like living in rural Iowa. I mean nothing,,,

We have had the privilege to live in two other states outside of Iowa. I think for that very reason we find more appreciation for small town living.

This is also coming from someone who would hit up the local Starbucks once and sometimes twice a day or stop at the shopping outlets and spend money we didn’t necessarily have on things I really didn’t need.

When we moved back home it was a bit of an adjustment for me. I never realized that almost every small town has a Casey’s gas station and a Dollar Store. Two locations that I never really went to living in Illinois or Colorado. We just didn’t have access to them.

Living in the Chicagoland area our properties were extremely close to each other. So close you could put your hand out the window and nearly touch your neighbor’s home. In Colorado we had more space but we were restricted by an HOA and had occasional run-ins with bear and mountain lions.

Both states completely different backdrop but I found myself doing the same things.

Moving back home to Iowa and buying a farm in a rural part of the state I soon realized what was important to me and it was not the Starbucks that is 30+ minutes away or the big box shopping centers.

This living forced me to dive a little deeper into what I really needed in life. It also showed me that I was spending way too much money on things that never made an impact to big companies that could care less if I bought from them because the next person would.

It forced me to look at other options. For example my coffee addiction and yes I still love my lattes but did I love them enough to make a single trip 30+ minutes to support a globally known billion dollar company who calls me by my government name and mispronounces it every time or could the local coffee shops who are run by women, who live in the city they run their business in and support their community make a latte just as good or better?

So yes when I splurge these days I no longer hit up the Starbucks. I hit up Beans and Blooms out of Reinbeck, Iowa to make me an iced Caramel Macchiato or hit up Natural Grind in Grundy Center, Iowa for a hot Chai Tea Latte. I do this now even if I am heading to an area that has a Starbucks. It was a mental shift for me.

I find the same things happen with small farms. It is extremely easy to make a trip to the store 30+ miles away to purchase meat that was likely not raised in Iowa or vegetables that traveled over 1500 miles to land on the grocery store shelves blasted with chemicals to make them look pretty and last longer.

Living in rural Iowa and buying a property, trying to build it into a sustainable farm has taught us that it is not easy work at all, but it is the most rewarding thing we have ever experienced.

Especially when we have people randomly stop by or reach out to say they heard about what we are doing and give us words of encouragement or support our farm by buying vegetables from us during our growing season at one of the local markets we attend or even drive 10-15+ minutes passing more convenient options to support a small farm. I absolutely get it now!

We have so many options available to us in our small community.

We have Holly at 5R Farms who also sells great produce and does amazing things with flowers. The Wical’s who have great produce at the market along with her famous pickles and baked goods! Grandma D’s baked goods, I love her monster protein snack! Can we talk about Marley and his tomatoes! Yuko who makes her amazing salts that I am still putting to great use! Did you also know that Yuko does a Live yoga on YouTube each week!👇

These are all great options around the Reinbeck area! Gladbrook also has some amazing vegetable farmers we have met! They will post on Facebook when they are having market and offer some great variety! We are hoping to get more involved with this market this year!

Last but not least there is an amazing baker in Toledo by the name of Frosted Bliss who makes these cake cups people… If you haven’t had the pleasure of a cake cup you are missing out! She is at the Toledo market and has a Facebook page!

I could go on and on about local options. I am only scratching the surface. Rural Iowa has taught me to appreciate my surroundings. Thank you Iowa for the wake up call, it came right on time!

Moral of the story… Convenient isn’t always better. Take the blinders off and dive head first into your local community. You will be amazed at what you find and who you can impact♥️

-✌🏼Jamie

www.madacrefarms.com

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Abandoned Carts 🛒

According to the Iowa Food Bank Association 229,500 Iowans including 80,190 children are having to make tough decisions on buying groceries or paying bills. Maybe you can relate in some shape or form or you know someone who can.

https://www.iowafba.org/about-hunger

I would like to share with you an experience that Ryan and I had in our 20’s. We started our family at a young age. There were times we had to make those tough decisions between groceries or bills. I remember we even swallowed our pride at one point and filled out the application for food stamp assistance. It was the first of the month and our first time using our food stamps. I was running point on the process and really had no clue how the system worked. We loaded our son up after Ryan made a grocery list for the month and off to Aldi’s we went. I remember it was extremely busy and we had a cart load. We stood in line to what felt like forever.. as we got to the cashier I whispered “we are using food stamps“. As the cashier ran the EBT card they looked back and said it was declined.. We had no money at that point we just finished paying all of our bills. We had to walk away without any groceries that day.

I often think of that moment when we are grocery shopping and see abandoned carts of groceries.. Was that cart a decision that was made and bills won?

I also recently read an article regarding the Des Moines Food Pantry Network (DMARC) saw their highest day of customers just this last September..and their busiest month in August of 2023.

https://www.dmarcunited.org/2023/09/dmarc-food-pantry-network-sees-busiest-month-of-all-time-in-august/

When we purchased this farm and started to carve out a space for our market garden we knew we wanted to have the ability to accept programs like SNAP and WIC. It was actually a priority for us. We wanted to be able to provide low income families with the same opportunities to eat fresh produce grown using sustainable practices that everyone else had access to.

We had to take classes and continue to enroll yearly for some of these programs. We knew the value and impact that these programs can have on a family in need.

What we have found is that we do not have very many customers who utilize the service we offer and we want to take a more proactive approach to let families know that we proudly accept these programs at the farm.

Learn more about us here!

We did after all utilize some of these services when we needed them and we didn’t have the accessibility of purchasing fresh produce grown responsibly when we were using these resources.

If our farm gives even just one family in need the ability to eat fresh produce grown using sustainable practices we have succeeded in our goal.

Moral of the story.. There is likely more to the story than it just being an abandoned cart of groceries. Remember that next time you see one. ✌🏼Jamie

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The GOAT..🐐

The GOAT has a couple of different meanings to me these days.. Some refer to the GOAT as the greatest of all time. You ask me it means got out again today…

Let me share with you a childhood memory that I carry with me that will shed a little more light on what experiences has helped shape me into who I am today. Maybe you can relate in some way.

There was a brief period in my life as a child where we had the farm life experience. and I mean It was brief.. I never understood why it was so brief back then but I understand it now.

I grew up with three brothers and one sister. I was a bit of a tomboy so I gravitated towards my brothers back then. I remember my dad bringing home our first goat, her name was Memory. Oh we loved her… I would ride her around the farm like she was my personal chauffeur. Looking back I am pretty sure she hated it but I loved her to pieces. I don’t remember much more outside of the joy she brought me.

One day I came home and Memory was no longer there and the farm life soon became a distant blur. What I didn’t realize at that time was the difficult decisions going on due to financial hardship my parents were having to make. My parents gave me an experience that I will never forget with Memory even if it was brief I remember the happiness I felt like it was yesterday.

Fast forward to today. Goats have always been part of the plan. Ryan is a forward thinker. He sets a purpose to any plan. The goats purpose is to help clear the over grown brush that has went unmanaged for many years on this property and potentially using our goats for milk in future ventures.

Our first experience of goats on the farm was about two years ago. We brought in two Nigerian Dwarf does (female) goats. I immediately fell in love with them like I typically do with any animal.

The plan was that Ryan would be the primary on this goat project. I would be available to offer my expert advice… totally kidding. We found out pretty quickly that the goats were intimidated by Ryan. They would not go near him nor could he catch them to try to leash train them.

I stepped in to work with them and get them leashed trained. I am by far no expert so it took me quite awhile to get them comfortable. Lots and lots of animal crackers and often times I would just sit with them and pet them and we would go on short walks every day. Little did I realize how much they helped me not think about my daily stressors of my career. They eventually stopped needing leashes and would follow me anywhere.

Winter started to get closer and we were able to get their paddock setup outside. We had an electric goat fence to “keep” them in.. Winter hit and I would haul water out to them. I remember one day I had just got done bringing water to them and headed back inside and as I am walking away I felt something behind me.. of course it’s one of them!

I thought maybe I didn’t get the fence closed good enough so I put her back in and headed back into the house and not even 5 seconds later I look to my left and there she is just trotting along.

Goats are amazing animals but are a lot of work and investment. If you are thinking about goats learn about them first and have the time they deserve to invest in them.

From that day on since they learned how to literally scale the fence there was nothing holding them back. We had to bring them in the barn until Spring and then invest in a goat proof fence.. just kidding they don’t exist. They can get out of anything basically. They just need to have things in their paddock to keep them busy along with something to graze on.

We also recently experienced loss due to illness which hit me like a ton of bricks. We brought in a buck on the property who was unknowingly ill and unfortunately got one of our girls very ill. We ended up losing both of them. Words of advice… be very intentional on where you purchase your goats from and know how they are cared for.

It’s tough owning a farm let alone animals. Also just learning the basics and the time it takes to do that. We now have added more goats to the property and are expecting baby goats very soon.

If you want to know what it feels like to have joy, excitement, anxiety, stress and frustration at the same time I highly recommend you get goats.

We are working on a new paddock in the front of the property with a bit of a vision..

How cool would it be to stop by the farm because you ran out of eggs or need to pick up a fresh ingredient for an amazing recipe you are trying after a hard day of work.

As you park and get out of your vehicle you see lots of goats running and playing… and when you look around you see a bench with an open seat inviting you to stay even for just a moment. As you sit down from a tough day you see a goat jumping on her newly made goat swing that Jamie has been pushing Ryan to make for years.

You can’t help to smile and forget about the chaos…

Looking forward to one day soon seeing benches around the goat paddock filled with people who just need a moment even if it’s brief to forget about the chaos.

Moral of the story…. Sometimes the littlest moments leave the greatest impact. Appreciate the littlest moments, trust me they matter.

-✌🏼Jamie

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The Extreme Home Makeover

There are moments I seriously question our sanity. Taking on a project of this size, just the two of us, feels overwhelming at times—like trying to see the forest through the thickest of trees. But here’s the thing: every crazy decision we’ve made so far has been worth it.

The plan for this Extreme Home Makeover? Restore it to its former glory while building efficiency into every inch of it. The efficiency part? That’s where it gets complicated. We have this massive house, sitting out here in what feels like the ruralest corner of the state. We’re about a mile off gravel—something we never gave much thought to until our first garden tour. Turns out, not everyone loves gravel roads like we do.

But hearing those whispers of doubt? That only fuels us. It’s our fire to make this property so spectacular that gravel doesn’t even cross people’s minds—they’ll want to come out here regardless.

And let’s be real: this house is a lot. I mean, it’s the product of a TV show called Extreme Home Makeover, not Charming Iowa Farmhouse. The family that originally lived here probably would’ve been perfectly happy with a cozy, typical Iowa home. But no, they got “extreme,” and now so do we.

We’ve got our work cut out for us. Inside, it’s all about taking baby steps. We’ve tackled one bathroom—making it functional but not yet perfect. Heating costs were insane, so we installed a wood-burning stove, which has been a game-changer. We’ve painted, re-insulated, and done little fixes here and there.

The dream? Once we’ve gotten this place back in shape, we want to open it up to the community. We imagine it as the perfect spot to host events, maybe even a place for guests to stay and experience life on the farm.

Every year, we inch closer to our vision, balancing the farm’s needs with the house’s endless to-do list. It’s chaotic, exhausting, and sometimes overwhelming—but it’s also one of the most rewarding things we’ve ever done.

Because for us, it’s not a matter of if we’ll make it happen. It’s a matter of what comes next when we finally do.

Moral of the story… The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over, expecting different results. Step out of your comfort zone. Chase the wild, impossible dream. It’d be insane not to.

-Jamie ❤️✌🏼

Learn More About The Farm

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Laying It All On The Table

Let me tell you a little about this photo… The person in this photo is me. It captured a moment of what I believe to be for myself my true happiness.

I work in corporate America and when I am not working the rat race I get the privilege of spending my nights and weekends building up for days like this.

So I am going to let you in on some details about what it took to find my true happiness.. The answer is in the photo.

Starting with our farm logo sign. I designed that! It took me a few tries but Ryan and I landed on this logo. I love graphic design I even went to college for it and trust and believe I had the piles of student loan debt to prove it. 

The EBT signage on the table, now I didn’t design that I just spent time researching if it is something we could take here at the farm. I spent time filling out the application and going through the training. It was precious time well spent.

The vegetables on the table. This is mid way through the market. We had quite a bit left still but what you didn’t see is the time spent growing these amazing vegetables. The time spent figuring out our crop plan that previous winter, the time spent learning how to grow them within the best possible conditions. That is by far my favorite part.. figuring out how to make the best of the best. The countless very early mornings before our corporate careers start, the late nights after work and weekends preparing our market garden plots, planting, and then the harvest days. You may just see a table of vegetables but let me tell you it is so much more than that. It is our belief that we can build something around what truly makes us happy and make it sustainable. One day I know that when someone asks what we do for a living and trust me we are asked often… We can give them a very simple and short answer of we are farmers.

Lastly, let’s talk about me..with a cheesy grin, an old Cubs hat which will always be my favorite, and a peace sign. That is my true self shining through. I like others have my insecurities and sometimes fight with the inner violence of not being good enough within myself even though I am reminded every day by Ryan of how amazing he thinks I am. The peace sign for me is selfishly a reminder to myself that inner peace is my key to staying strong no matter what is thrown my way.

I have found true happiness being on this farm. I no longer need validation. 

Moral of the story is… Have the courage to lay it all out on the table… not for them but for you ✌🏼

-Jamie

http://www.madacrefarms.com

The Local Diet

There is nothing more intimidating than to walk up to a farmer’s market table and have no idea what half the produce on the table is let alone how to cook it. At least for me…

Maybe you can relate in some shape or form. I have really done some digging deep down lately on how can I implement more whole foods in my diet that were locally sourced. If I am being honest here I haven’t felt the greatest physically and my stress levels have been a little high…on top of that, I am a stress eater. Not going to sugar coat it.. your girl can smash a row of Oreos in under 5 minutes.

I started to realize that I have the ability to grow what I need but still choose convenience. It is crazy if you think about it.. we as humans are sometimes very particular about the brand of clothes we wear, the kind of cars we drive but don’t think twice about running through a drive through because it’s more convenient let alone the thought of what’s in the food goes out the window.

This market season I am challenging myself to cut down my refined sugar and pick up a healthier option and find quick ways to incorporate whole foods into my diet. I am getting a jump on my lifestyle change by cutting down my sugar intake. This is one of my highest priorities right now.

I no longer have sugar in my coffee, this was a brutal change for me. I was also drinking a ton of soda and eating lots of sweets because I told myself I deserved them because of a stressful day.

What I am starting to notice is that not having these things in my diet I am getting better sleep, I don’t feel so tired all the time, my skin is starting to look healthier and I just all around feel better. Can you imagine if I take this a step further and start planning meals around what is on a farmers market table or what we can provide right here at the farm!?

The thought of how am I going to have time to really make this work into our lifestyle crosses my mind often. I have started to slowly implement ways to cut out the junk and replace it with something healthier and not time consuming. I do this while looking up meal prep ideas along with juicing recipes.

Last season I bought a Hamilton Beach Juicer for $69 on Amazon. I have not even scratched the surface of the things I can make.. maybe a juicer is not currently in the budget for you but consider if you are a coffee or soda drinker I would be willing to bet you could save for two weeks and not purchase those items as much and have more than enough to purchase a decent juicer.

Last year we had an abundance of eggplant and pears from the farm . I juiced those together. You may be turning your nose up to that right now and I don’t blame you.. I probably would have too! It actually tasted pretty good and the unbelievable health benefits eggplants bring to the table is insane. Such an underrated vegetable. It actually is great for weight loss! I also have a few carrot juicing recipes that I am wanting to try this season as well to up my Whole Foods game!

Recipes here!

Let’s talk about some meal prep ideas! I am going to try the mason jar meal prep this season with all of our leafy greens and what ever we bring home from market will go into those. If I can preserve it I will! Kale is on my radar to turn into a powder that I can use all year long. I put a recipe on our website that shows how to do this!

Click here to learn how!

I am on a mission not only to eat locally grown food but to inspire others to do the same. Get outside of your comfort zones and go to your local farmers markets with a plan. If you are new to the market scene and nervous come see me I got you and if we don’t have what you need we promote other farmers who do!

Taking this a step further, find your local farmer! Not only can you change the way you feel with implementing whole foods in your diet you can help a local farmer continue to provide those great options on your table and keep your dollars local. Building relationships with your local farmers is so unbelievably important. Especially when it means you know where your food comes from and how it was grown.

I of course won’t go 100% without sugar. I mean I am motivated but not crazy 😜. My splurge day will be me supporting local. Meaning the bakers at the markets and of course the local coffee shops! I won’t splurge unless it’s local. I have already started to carry this approach ♥️

Moral of the story.. Find your local farmers♥️

-✌🏼Jamie

Silent Rooms

I want to share with you a moment from our journey—a storm we had to weather on the way to building the life we dreamed of here in Iowa.

After selling our home in Colorado, we thought we’d found the perfect farm—a sprawling agricultural property with a pond near Waterloo. It felt like destiny. But looking back now, the red flags were everywhere, waving wildly, as if to warn us. Instead of heeding them, we pushed forward, blinded by hope and determination.

not the actual property but you get the point

The delays started almost immediately. Paperwork moved at a snail’s pace, and yet we told ourselves it was nothing out of the ordinary. Then came the inspection. The property had taken on water in the basement—something no one had mentioned until we uncovered it. But still, we pressed on.

There’s one moment from that inspection that sticks with me. As we walked the property, a car drove by. Slowly. Too slowly. Something about it made my stomach twist, but I brushed it off, convincing myself it wasn’t worth worrying over.

A few days later, everything came crashing down. Our realtor called with unexpected news: the seller no longer wanted to sell the property to us. We hadn’t even received the full inspection report yet. It didn’t make sense.

And then it got worse.

The seller tried to press trespassing charges against us. Against us—buyers with a signed inspection agreement allowing us to be there. Our realtor had to intervene, showing the police our paperwork to clear up the situation. It was messy, humiliating, and, honestly, devastating.

We had poured so much time, money, and emotion into this property. But it was clear we needed to walk away. And so, we did.

After that ordeal, I built walls around myself. I became jaded, angry, and skeptical. Every argument about whether Iowa was truly the right place to plant roots only solidified those walls. Ryan, on the other hand, never wavered.

“This is our home,” he’d say, his voice steady. “One bad experience won’t take that away.”

To him, it was a stumble, not a fall. Where I saw betrayal, he saw a chance to try again. It’s always been Ryan who believes in second chances, who sees the good in people—even when I can’t.

Eventually, we came across a new opportunity: the Extreme Home Makeover house in Gladbrook. That’s a story for another day, but we purchased the property in December 2020.

By spring of 2021, I was still guarded. I wasn’t ready to trust this new chapter. Then one afternoon, the doorbell rang. We weren’t expecting anyone, and truthfully, we rarely get company.

I opened the door to meet Gary O., one of our neighbors. He introduced himself warmly, gave us his number, and even stopped by later that day to help us with a project.

I don’t think he realized it then, but Gary shattered the walls I had spent months building. His kindness, his willingness to show up for us—a couple of strangers—was more than a neighborly gesture. It was hope.

Gary became the first to remind me of something I had forgotten: there are still good people in the world, people who will clap for you even when the room is silent.

Over time, I began to see it wasn’t just Gary. We were surrounded by neighbors and a community who cheered for us in ways big and small. Their kindness turned Iowa into more than a place to live—it became home.

I see it now. We are exactly where we’re supposed to be. Sometimes, you just have to get through the storm to appreciate the calm that follows.

I debated whether to share this story, but it’s an important part of our journey. It reminds me that every setback we face throws a little more fuel on the fire of determination—to accomplish something extraordinary or die trying.

Moral of the story… Kindness is powerful. You have the ability to make a difference in someone’s life. Have the courage to clap even if it means you may be the only one clapping in a silent room.

Be someone’s Gary. ♥️

– ❤️✌🏼 Jamie


What Will They Think?

There use to be a thought that I gave way more space in my mind than it deserved. It still often sneaks its way in to take a chair in my mental space that I find myself needing to let it know… that seat is already taken by do what makes you happy.

Last year we started to have some troubles with our truck. It was in the shop more than on the road. We still had a loan on the truck but not too far from paying it off. The dealership it was at offered to buy it from us. Ryan and I agreed it was time to let it go. This paid off our loan and we were a step closer to financial freedom… but we needed another truck. We searched and searched but everything was so overpriced and we were not about to get another loan. Ryan being Ryan sold me on the fact we could just get a cheap truck for now because we had just made it through winter and just need a truck to get us back and forth from market. 

I reluctantly agreed but deep down knew Ryan was going to be extremely cheap with his selection because of how close we have become to reaching our debt free goal. He found a truck 2 weeks later and we went to look at it. Let’s just say she wasn’t pretty, it was almost 30 years old but was reliable we were told and it was an old city truck.

Ryan bought it… I remember on the way home thinking what will people think when we pull up in this truck vs our much newer one? How do I explain this!? People are going to think we are experiencing financial hardship. This is embarrassing I thought to myself.

My first official ride in that truck was to pick up farm supplies in Cedar Falls. It was a busy weekend and Ryan already knew I was a little embarrassed about the truck. We had to stop at Menards. I went to get out and the door would not open. Ryan was standing behind the truck and I looked at him and he smirked as he gave me the winding motion to roll down my window and open it from the outside. That was a humbling experience to say the least. It was a reminder of the greater goal we are after and to clear that mental space and make room for what makes you happy. Even if people see you coming and reconsider their parking decisions or hit that lock button a couple extra times for good measure… trust me it happened 😃 I think that by far was the most humbling part for me.

I did voice a few grievances to him that day but inside I was laughing about the gentle reminder of being humble. Ryan names everything he brings into this house. The truck’s official name is Beverly. We drove Beverly all summer even though the heat never shut off at all and the truck didn’t have AC but Ryan got a little fan he would share every so often on the hottest of days.

We ended up getting another truck after we saved enough money to make a sound financial decision to buy a newer truck before winter. Ryan put the old truck up for sale but it was me who told him not to sell Beverly because I would use that truck this summer for market. So if you happen to read this story about Beverly just know we have come a long way and I now drive her with pride even though my feet barely reach the peddles she reminds me to just move a little closer and don’t take her over 55 and we will be just fine.

Moral of the story… We are conditioned far too much to care what others think. Let them park somewhere else and hit their lock button a few extra times. You continue to roll that window down and open it from the outside if you have to. Keep chasing your dreams. #behumble

-Jamie

http://www.madacrefarms.com

In His Shoes

There was a young boy that was born in Mississippi to a single mother who witnessed the unimaginable tragedy of his mother losing her vision.

The young boy was raised by very strong women who embraced whatever was thrown their way and would always figure out how to make something out of nothing. The perseverance that they instilled in this young boy to never give up and always hold your head up high regardless of the situation is admirable.

There is a story I would like to share with you that I am often reminded of on my hardest of days. It reminds me to keep moving regardless of what is thrown our way.

This particular story happened when the young boy was in elementary school after his mother became blind. The young boy was in need of shoes for school and wanted Nikes. They were a little out of their price range but the young boys mother found a way to make it happen.

She found a pair of Nikes that someone was selling. They told her they were baseball shoes and were within the budget. She sent the young boy to get the shoes. He was so excited when he saw the shoes in the box. He didn’t know what they actually were. He just thought they were cool, so he gave them the money and brought the shoes home.

The young boy wore those shoes to school. They were very noisy as he walked down the hall and could barely stay standing because they were so slippery on the floor. The young boy was wearing baseball cleats. The kids at his school were relentless and gave him the business about those shoes.

He ended up wearing those shoes for two weeks before his mother learned what was going on. He never complained… he after all picked up the shoes. He knew that things could be so much worse.

The young boy in the story was Ryan.

Ryan was raised by a team of very strong women and I mean strong. He is a very patient human being, probably one of the most patient people I know.

Ryan and his grandmother

I think of this story more often on the farm when I see him working on a project that is giving him a run for his money and he gets down on himself because he is struggling with figuring it out.

We recently bought a hay wagon to turn it into something pretty cool if you ask me! I challenged Ryan to do the project on his own. He just needs to believe in himself as much as I do.

I know sometimes he feels like the shoes just don’t fit.. However, the thing about Ryan is that he was raised by strong women who are driven. That just motivates him more and ignites his fire to keep chasing his dreams.

Moral of the story… Sometimes we walk through life wearing the wrong shoes slipping and falling. Find the strength and courage to get up and stand tall until you find a better pair of shoes.

-✌🏼Jamie

Trust In Turnips

We have a market garden we started here on our farm. One of the early goals was to start to build a presence in the community and get folks excited about what we are doing at the farm. What better way than to grow vegetables and participate at the local farmers markets right?!

When I tell you we have never worked so hard for so very little… just take my word for it. We knew it was going to take some hard work to build a presence and knew that the farm would need more than just vegetables to get by.. we just needed to perfect our garden and then continue to add additional opportunities for income.

We started to be very strategic about what and when we grow our produce. Last year we spent a ton of time calculating out our projected sales.. this is so embarrassing to admit but we didn’t even hit 20% of our goal.. I mean we had a plan people… here is where we really messed up.

We pre-ordered our seeds. We selected crop that was new to us. One of these crops that we projected a decent sales from was Purple Globe Turnips. We had a 50’ bed of these vegetables… yes you heard me 50’. We would harvest to take to market and then end up bringing a majority of the turnip harvest back home. We couldn’t even give them away. I tried to figure out where we went wrong. At the end of the season as I am trying to figure out what to do with them… we put all of our trust in turnips.

We were faced with many people who had never tried turnips, myself included, I could not give our customers a great answer of how they tasted because I hadn’t ever had any myself. I remember coming home after a market and started to research what turnips are good for and did a few taste tests. After that day I could tell customers that they taste like a mix between a radish and potato. I could also provide our customers with the ability this root crop has to be substituted with a potato without the cholesterol or the fat along with if stored correctly it could hold for months.. by the time I figured all of this out our season was over and I was left with almost an entire 50’ bed of turnips that I committed to preserve so the food we worked so hard for doesn’t go to waste.

I have learned to make vegetable soup and add some turnip for flavor. We received a fantastic recipe from one of our customers using radish. I substituted it with turnip. We are also fortunate enough to have saved for and purchased a small freeze dryer that helped me preserve the harvest.

Moral of the story…. Creating a plan is great. But having a plan that supports the vision and goal of the true outcome is the key to success. We set a financial plan and forgot about the people.

-Jamie

Wait… You Don’t Own A TV!?

The first year we moved back was a whirlwind of us getting everything organized at the farm and sharing our dream and vision with family and friends. We of course received the smirks and eye rolls knowing most of them think we are weird and crazy. We started to think maybe we are too.. As we continued to share our passions and dreams we soon realized that we got less calls and less visitors but we have each other and the belief in our dreams being a reality continues to grow. 

We started to find likeminded people who still to this day believe in us on days we have nothing left in the tank. Strangers reaching out with words of encouragement that have now become our driving force.

This life isn’t easy but it is rewarding in ways people may not understand.

I remember about a year ago my father came to visit and was going to show Ryan how to hunt. That meant he would spend the night.. he had only been to our home once or twice prior. He sat down on our couch and said where is your tv!? I had to explain to my father that we don’t own one and gave it to our son because we found ourselves not using it. He was floored! What do you mean you don’t have a tv!? What do you guys do without a tv, I responded we talk about our goals and create plans for our success. 

My father gave me that look I knew far too well since coming back home… the smirk and eye roll. I am now reminded anytime I visit my family who all live within a 10 mile radius of each other of how weird I am not owning a tv.. and I of course invite them over to show them what we do and how rewarding living a life like this can be. 

So… we don’t own a TV, we don’t have a cable bill either. We also don’t miss it at all. We have so many things to focus on it would be a distraction for us.
Some may think it’s weird… and that is okay. To us it’s normal and in a way freeing us from distractions.

Moral of the story… Don’t let someone’s definition of you get in the way of your dreams and goals. Let your freak flag fly! 

-Jamie✌🏼

Flight Risk Adjacent

I get the privilege to lead an exceptional team of men and women during the day and get the honor of working with my husband on our farm dreams after hours.

As a leader you often are asked if there are any potential flight risks. If you are not familiar with the term it basically means are there any possibilities that someone is looking for a better opportunity outside the organization.

Typically as a leader if you have any top talent as a flight risk to leave to competitors you try to find development opportunities to help them to the next level within the organization.

If you would have asked me 5 years ago I would have told you that my ultimate goal was to climb that corporate ladder so when my leader was asked about a flight risk I would not come up in conversation…I was the perfect corporate employee. Work over family…

What I have come to realize is that when you have a potential flight risk and the opportunity presented isn’t another competitor but a dream or vision… you don’t stand a chance. 

Ryan and I would joke about being flight risk adjacent. Which to us meant we are not quite a flight risk but flying along side of the possibility… I mean we even talked about it on a video. We have set things in motion, our motive is no longer monetary.. it is happiness and living a life that has meaning. 

It is not a secret we have a dream, a vision and a purpose which has started to be undeniable. We no longer hide its shine.

So now when my leader is asked about flight risk I know my name crosses that list and the explanation isn’t due to competition but due to an undeniable passion and purpose to live louder. But.. until I depart they will continue to get 110% and my commitment to leave the organization better than when I found it. Here’s to being flight risk adjacent ✈️

Moral of the story… Change is scary but so is not chasing your dreams. #flightriskadjacent

-Jamie ✌🏼

What Is It Costing You?

Ryan has always and I mean always talked about owning a farm. I never took it serious enough to really think it would happen until our first relocation for our careers.

We bought our first home on the east side of Waterloo. We were so proud to say we owned something. I ended up landing a gig that would help relocate us to the Chicagoland. Ryan had a career that would allow him to transfer but was warned of the reputation of what he may be getting himself into. He never really shared that with me until after we already moved. He knew I needed more and was willing to sacrifice. 

We had made a commitment that when 5 years hit and if I had no advancement towards my goals we would come back home and buy a farm… Ryan was so unhappy in Illinois. He did however end up landing a sweet virtual gig. I remember it was the 5th year Ryan of course reminded me every day. I ended up throwing my name in the hat for a position with another company for a job in Wisconsin but that ended up changing a bit and was later told either Arizona or Colorado… I ended up getting the job. I told Ryan and he was reluctant, but I assured him he could pick the state and home. He agreed and chose Colorado.

 We had a very short window to move. We searched for property after property, and it was getting down to crunch time. We ended up buying a property sight unseen spending an uncomfortable amount of money on the home for a one-acre property at the base of a mountain with a very flexible HOA that allowed livestock we were told…

Ryan ended up packing up our home In Illinois basically by himself so I could get to Colorado to start my new job. Ryan also did this for our Illinois move so by now he was a professional.

I remember the first day Ryan made it to the house in Colorado he was unbelievably tired but needed to run to the local Tractor Supply store with a trailer still attached to his truck with our belongings… I jumped in for the ride. I of course stayed in the truck while he went into the store and about an hour later he rolls out with a box in his hand and a Tractor Supply employee running out after him to give him a hat and welcomed him to the community. That particular individual at that time was about to be a driving force in Ryan’s life and provide the very inspiration Ryan was needing. 

Ryan smiling from ear to ear hopped in the truck and handed me the box… I heard little chirps coming from it and I looked at Ryan and said you didn’t!?…. He smiled back and said I did…

From that point right there it was evident things were going to change. Ryan immediately started working on a coop setup and we spent quite a bit of money to do it in our backyard. We had two coops Ryan was starting to really enjoy Colorado living.. He named our homestead Mad Acre Homestead.  Mad for our last name and acre to represent the one acre of land we now called ours in Colorado. 

There was a brief moment in time where I thought Colorado would be our forever home…until the day we got a letter.

I was traveling for work. I traveled 2-3 times in a month. I was barely home. Ryan was the one taking care of everything. I heard the disappointment in his voice. The letter was from the HOA. The letter stated someone complained about our chickens and the noise.. mind you at that time we had no roosters. As soon as I got back home we went to the HOA meeting where they showed us the guidelines of no chickens. We were actually provided an old doc from our realtor that showed us we could have livestock.

We fought it and of course was a losing battle. So I did what any normal person would do… if you can’t beat them, join them. So I joined the HOA set on a mission to change the views of the community and get the ability to bring chickens back to our property. This was after all my dream property. I spent a lot of time changing guidelines and getting approvals. The next step was walking the pavement and then 2020 hit. At this point Ryan had enough. We were just informed my job turned virtual and that was the missing piece of the puzzle. We sold everything we owned that would not fit into a U-Haul and I mean everything, and we never looked back.

Moral of the story…If you think you will find happiness in things, you might.. but what is it costing you? I was so focused on never stopping and reaching the next bar that I was stepping on the very people who help elevate me to reach it and never turned around to give them my hand to pull them up beside me. It cost me time I could never get back. Time is way more valuable than things..trust me I know this far too well.

— Jamie✌🏼

So What’s Your Plan

I remember the month we moved in… it was quite literally in the middle of winter. Ryan would tell me to put something warm on so we could go outside and walk the property. So I of course did. We would walk side by side and Ryan would tell me his plan on how we are going to make this into something. This happened almost daily and we still do this today even in the middle of winter. This ongoing vision continues to push us even on our hardest of days. I will share the plan in this blog. Today I get the honor to share with you the vision behind our market garden.

We need to build an income for the farm. Yes we have full time careers but the plan is to have the farm be sustainable. For us that meant a farm that takes care of itself. So we carved out space on the southeast side of the property which is constricted a bit by concrete slabs. We found a company to come in and get the well fixed which we knew had likely issues even though the prior owner said they were not sure due to not using in a while. We expected worse case scenario. 

Once we carved out that area and spent countless days and nights and endless unofficial marriage counseling sessions along with screaming matches on how to make the best of the best we were able to come out of it in our eyes shining brighter than we have ever shined before. This market garden has become so much more than a way to build an income for the property or bring people to the farm.. it has become a testament of our ability to combine forces and grow into something so much greater than we ever thought we could be.

We ended up finding a greenhouse on Craigslist in MN, so we bought it the following season and added a small greenhouse to one of the plots last year and started to figure out how to grow in it. While we were figuring this out we had also thrown our name in the hat for a grant to obtain a much larger greenhouse. During this time of figuring out our small greenhouse we were awarded the grant to obtain the much bigger one. This would give us the ability to extend our growing season.. Now we needed to figure out how to grow in it and of course how to get this thing put together.

Here we have two people who have very minimal DIY skills with multiple DIY projects going on the property.. Not sure if you can relate but for me being a person that needs efficiency and process now in a world of DIY chaos I was stressed to say the very least. We searched for people to pay to help us and what I have found is when people pull up they see the house and assume we will shell out money.. Remember not rich, not comfortable just focused. We would continue to get extreme bids or we would have contractors tell us the job isn’t worth their time and not show up. We are two people who have always made it on our own not needing much from anyone until now… you can only imagine how unbelievably hard it is to ask for assistance. What we didn’t realize was we didn’t have to, being in the community we are in people naturally want to help. This is something we just were not use to… Our neighbors stop by at the right times and help us, it’s like they just know. Our friends from the community reach out to lend a hand at exactly the right time! We are truly blessed with the people in our lives.

The plan hasn’t changed for the market garden it has just continued to grow. We try to add additional markets to join each year but becomes increasingly difficult to juggle the market, getting ready for the market and our day time jobs. During growing season we typically get 4-5 hrs of sleep and hit the garden very early in the morning to water, harvest and tend to along with late night similar routines. It has gotten a little easier and continues to create mental and physical toughness. 

One day very soon the plan is to have a self-serve farm stand on the property that we stock daily with our fresh produce and other goods produced here on the farm and other local vendors. I can’t wait for the day where I am able to greet people coming to the farm and share with them how the plan all started with a cold winter walk.

Moral of the story… It all starts with a vision… it is up to you to finish how your story ends and the main characters in it. 

-Jamie

Braving The Storm

Such a beautiful photo of this Iowa winter storm at the farm. This is us making the best of it. We did after all make the decision to buy a farm in Iowa knowing how brutal winters can be.

What you don’t see in this photo is us rushing out on our breaks the day before from our corporate careers to make sure all of our animals are holding up in this storm. We of course work from home and don’t ever have snow days which is the trade off of a virtual employee. I wouldn’t change it for the world and know that there are many people that would appreciate a job with this kind of flexibility. Not complaining as it has its perks.

While everyone we come into virtual contact with is expressing how ready they are for the weekend, I have a list of very important tasks I must tend to and finding a way to complete my work expectations so I can immediately rush out into the belly of the storm with Ryan to make sure our farm is still standing with no lives lost.

We rushed out right at 5 and immediately knew it was going to get worse before it got better. We power-housed into our barn and made space for our ducks and farm dog. Running the ducks one in each hand to the barn as our farm dog right beside us running back and forth. We got them in all safe and sound. The chickens were safe in their coop along with the geese in there house. The peacocks were sitting on their stoop just living their best life… they had a dry coop to seek refuge so we let them do them.

Running back and forth in waist deep even shoulder deep drifts is exhausting. We landed back in the house 3 hours later and looked at each other and smiled. We did it! At least for the night we could rest easy knowing our farm is safe.

As we woke up the next morning we walked out with the wind not letting up. This was the first photo I took to represent this very day. The farm was still safe but new challenges ahead of us. Waist deep drift’s literally everywhere we walk, Ryan is digging out but not quick enough as the wind continues to fill the paths back up with snow. It took us 3 hours to do our chores and as I am falling every other step thinking about what everyone else is up to I think to myself I still wouldn’t trade this for the world and continued to carry 5 gallon buckets of water to our livestock. I would do it 100 times over if I had to. That’s what this photo will now be a forever reminder of why we do what we do.

Moral of the story… Find what fuels your fire even on the toughest of days. Trust me you will know when you find it. It won’t be a matter of asking yourself if you are sure, it will be a matter of you telling yourself lets conquer the world regardless of the storm♥️

-Jamie

Three Sisters

Have you ever heard of the Three Sisters Companion Planting technique? It is a Native American practice to maximize growing space and promote strong growth and sustainability.

The three crops planted together would be corn, beans, and a variety of squash or pumpkin. The corn would be planted first, then around two weeks later the pole bean and squash. The corn provides stability for the growth of the climbing bean and the squash planted at the same time of the bean would provide shade to the soil. It was a practice that is still used and feeds communities.

We gave this very method a try except I didn’t know at the time the meaning or truly the best practice behind it. What I mean by that is I didn’t take the time to research how to actually use its fullest potential.

We planted everything at the same time and used a pea vs a bean at the peak of summer. If you are new to gardening like I was, planting a pea at the peak of summer is like throwing money out the window. Peas do not grow well in the summer heat. The corn and squash took off but the peas didn’t grow as fast because of the summer heat and were choked out by the squash. We had a few plantings that worked out okay but not ideal. When we do this again we will plant the corn first, then the climbing bean and then the squash after we of course research the best varieties to use!

I couldn’t understand at the time why our companion planting wasn’t thriving but stepping back I realized that had we of taken the time to do the proper research we would have spent less time trying to troubleshoot our lack of an abundant harvest.

Moral of the story… Try new things! It may not be an instant success story but imagine all the great chapters you get to add until it becomes your greatest story told!

-Jamie

Humble Pie

One of the biggest questions we get hands down since we moved back to Iowa is “if you don’t mind me asking, what do you guys do for a living?” I will admit in the beginning after I was asked a few times I started to wonder if it is a common question or was there something more behind it that peaked curiosity. I would respond my typical response we work in corporate America and have been fortunate with our career paths… but here is what I really wanted to say..

Ryan and I come from very humble beginnings. That may be what initially fueled our fires. We met in college here in Iowa both had no clue what we wanted to do in college just knew it was what we were supposed to do to be successful right? Life of course happens and we started a family very young when neither of us were prepared to bring another life into this world. That again fueled our fire. Ryan and I both worked full time jobs and took online and night classes to finish our degrees. After acquiring all that debt I couldn’t find a job that would pay me more than what I was already making and I knew I needed more. Ryan ended up landing a great job here in Iowa that he enjoyed but he knew I needed more. This is where we ended up moving for our careers. We missed out on a lot for our careers. While our families were back in Iowa we were working on building a better life for our young family. This meant a lot of sacrifice for everyone including our son.

We are by far not rich or comfortable in any means. We are just not shy of taking risks. You have to remember that we both came from humble beginnings. When Ryan wanted to move back to Iowa we were very fortunate to be able to sell our home in CO quickly and Ryan has always been a penny pincher. You are probably thinking a penny pincher yet a risk taker!? Yes it’s true a risk taker with always more than one plan. It has been what has gotten us to where we are today.

We took a risk and bought an Extreme Home Makeover House… we now refer to it as an extreme fixer upper. We have a vision for this property and don’t mind sharing it. We may be a little slower coming off the blocks on this one but it’s because our plan in no shape or form includes acquiring new debt. Everything we do on this property we save for. It will be one of our most extraordinary accomplishments and can only hope you stick around to see it!

Moral of the story.. There is almost always more to someone’s story than what they are giving you or what you think you see. 

-Jamie

We Can Learn A Little Something From Bees

I read a quote that I get reminded of frequently when I see our honey bees zooming around on the property or I see them doing something extraordinary.. “Anyone who thinks they’re too small to make a difference, has never met a honey bee. -Unknown 

That quote couldn’t be any more true. I took this photo (far right) one extremely hot summer day. I remembered I had to google what and why they were doing what they were doing because there is no way I would be chasing another bee swarm.

What I found out was that the bees will often beard the hive on hot days to regulate temperature. I mean it seemed like the entire hive was out there just buzzing away. It was quite incredible.

They we’re working together for a common cause. That inspired me. So I started to learn more about bees and their importance to the food system in our world. 75% of our food crop depends on bees to pollinate them in order to produce food, did you know that!? I had no clue…

Everything started to make sense on why Ryan has become so invested in nature’s magicians ( I borrowed that line 😃) but it’s true they are magical and it was at that moment I knew I had to help do my part on this property to build an environment they could thrive in.

This means spending countless hours creating a habitat with native wildflowers all around the property and when the project doesn’t turn out the way it’s intended we don’t complain about it we just do it again. (I should say don’t complain much, still working on the no complaining part 😉)

So if ever given the chance to visit our property and you see the countless unfinished projects going just know each and every one of those projects started with a dream and vision and it may be our second or third go round at it but we haven’t gave up we are just learning as we go.

We often feel like an army of two on this property chasing a crazy dream that most people we come in contact with may not understand but it’s the impact we know we can make and often look to our bees for inspiration.. such a small creature has one of the greatest abilities to impact the world.

Moral of the story.. Build an environment you can thrive in even if it takes multiple tries. Be sure to build that environment with those that understand your purpose. Be a honey bee 🐝 

– Jamie

The Glass House

Such a beautiful moment captured into this photo.. The countless hours we spent on building the pathway to the greenhouse, the bickering back and forth of what to grow along with the story leading up to the greenhouse.

It was love at first sight with that greenhouse. I had no idea why at that very moment because at that point in time I barely opened a bag of soil let alone knew how to grow a vegetable garden but it was something about having a glass house that intrigued me.

The month we moved in after doing what we could inside the now what we know to be the Extreme Fixer Upper. We started to work on that old glass house…getting it cleaned out from the years of being treated like an old storage unit. We however saw its greatest potential.

The more we dug and cleaned the more we realized how much work it was going to take to get this glass house back into its greenhouse potential. We didn’t care we knew what we had.

It didn’t come without its challenges. The first spring we immediately kicked into high gear and started to try to use it. What we soon realized is that it doesn’t keep heat.. so we invested far too much time and money trying to make it into something that it wasn’t built for. It took us about two years to realize how that glass house could be great. We stopped trying to figure out how to heat it and started figuring out what we could grow best in it and how. That was a game changer for us.

The moment we saw the glass house for its true great greenhouse potential we were able to grow seedlings without heat, get amazing spinach along with other greens. We also figured out how to grow cucumbers and tomatoes a little bit longer in the cold Iowa seasons.

Much like most things on this property the greenhouse needs work. We would like to redo the slab and have even discussed building it below the frost line. Just a few dreamers over here with a vision♥️. Until then we with work with our greenhouse’s greatest potential!

Moral of the story… Don’t fit the mold of what you are expected to be. Your greatest potential is staring you in the face. Find the courage to chase it♥️

-Jamie

The Strength Behind Us

Sometimes looking back is exactly what you need to find the strength to move forward.

To say we’ve poured countless hours into this garden plot would be an understatement. It’s more than a piece of land to us—it’s a place filled with blood, sweat, and tears. And if I’m being honest, it’s the very ground that tested us, broke us down, and somehow made us stronger.

Ryan and I work from home, so we’re together nearly 100% of the time. This wasn’t always the case. It started when we moved back to Iowa, a decision that changed everything. Working side by side has its challenges, and if you’ve ever been in this position, you know what I mean. These moments can either break you or make you stronger. For us, this farm—this plot—has made us bulletproof.

The truth is, this garden didn’t start with both of us on the same page. It was Ryan’s vision, his project, his baby. That first year? I was there, but not really there. I helped when asked, but I wasn’t fully bought in. I doubted. I questioned. I didn’t see what he saw. And the garden? Well, let’s just say it reflected that disconnect. The weeds won that year. They outgrew every crop, swallowing up any chance of success. We found two cheap greenhouses, threw them up halfheartedly, and did almost nothing with them.

We weren’t working together—we were working against each other.

Then, one day, something shifted. I don’t know why or how, but it did. I saw Ryan out there, pouring everything he had into that garden. I stood there watching him, and for the first time, I truly saw him. I saw the passion, the drive, the need he had to make this work. And in that moment, I realized this wasn’t a phase. This was who he was.

That moment changed everything. Not just for the garden, but for us.

I started showing up—not just physically but mentally, emotionally. I got out of my own way, let go of my ego, and trusted Ryan to lead. It wasn’t easy, but it was necessary.

The next year, we tackled that plot together, both fully invested. And let me tell you, it wasn’t perfect. We still had disagreements, moments where we didn’t see eye to eye. But we always found common ground. Together, we turned an inefficient, unstable, unstructured patch of weeds into a thriving, functional, and beautiful garden.

This garden became more than just a plot of land. It became proof. Proof that when you work together, trust each other, and believe in something bigger than yourself, you can turn chaos into something extraordinary.

We went from fragile to bulletproof—and the garden stands as a testament to that transformation.

Moral of the story: It’s not always about you. Sometimes, the real power comes in leaning into the meaning of us. I’m just grateful I realized it sooner rather than later.

-❤️✌🏼Jamie
www.madacrefarms.com

Building A Dream.. One Garden Bed At A Time

The very first thing we did on this farm to build an income was create a market garden.

I thought to myself that’s easy enough just plant a seed and it grows. Boy was I wrong!

We both work full-time jobs during the day. What I didn’t realize was the minute we decided to purchase a farm and strive to make it a working farm my life would change drastically.

The farm is our second full-time job. We miss out on a lot of events because what we have going on here at the farm. Admittedly at first it was hard for me to understand because I wasn’t putting in my fullest effort. As I started to commit more time to the farm I realized why it matters so much and the reward it brings even though we may miss out on things because someone has to be home to assist the animals or tend to the garden or be at a market. The pure joy this farm brings outweighs anything thrown at it.

I remember it was our second market garden season and Ryan spent countless hours n the winter researching and watching video after video on building the perfect garden beds.. When springtime rolled around he had a plan. We took two weeks off of work and focused strictly on the market garden. We purchased compost which was now looking back far too expensive and not worth it, but the big names were doing it so we needed to as well. What was often not disclosed on those big name videos is the cost of the product coming in. For us little farmers spending a good chunk of money on compost was a big deal. We soon learned it was a nice to have and not a need to have as there are other alternatives out there.

We spent so much time getting our garden beds perfect like in the videos we watched to spend the entire season day and night weeding them. This was all part of the process of building a successful market garden. Except we thought it was an instant process. What we didn’t realize is that it took those very successful market gardeners years to perfect. We got so caught up in the perfect that we became discouraged at our leaps of progress.

That season was a pretty successful year once we stopped to look back at how far we have came. 

If I can offer a piece of advice it would be not to get caught up in comparison. I have found that you sometimes envy those who may not show the challenges and struggles they went through to get where they are at. It can often paralyze your progress. 

The following season we ran into some struggles because we fell into that rut again of watching and doing but we recognized it and dug our way back out to end with a successful season.

This next season we are doing what is best for our farm our way!

Moral of the story…. Sometimes things may not be what they seem. Build your own path and never give up!

-Jamie

http://www.madacrefarms.com

Exploring Beyond Our Boundaries

Pushing yourself outside of your comfort zone is scary. You would have never believed it from this photo. So many things going through our minds this very day… what if no one buys anything, will the community accept us? Are we doing this right? What will people think? Should we do this? These were our very fears that were trying to redirect us back to our safe space and turn that truck around that was loaded with our freshly picked produce that morning.

As we pulled up to our first Farmers Market in 2021 we were greeted by what we now know as our local community. As we put our truck in park and started to unload, multiple vendors greeted us with introductions and offered a helping hand to setup our stand.

That day was the day I knew coming back home to Iowa was the right choice. Although we were completely out of our comfort zone we were welcomed with such warmth from the community. It was so abundantly clear that from that day forward we needed to work harder than we have ever worked before to get it right not for us but for our community.

We have been trying ever since.

We continue to work on improving our skills and put everything we can into building something extraordinary here at the farm. 

Moral of this story is don’t let your fears get in the way of achieving your goals. Sometimes going through them is the only way♥️ so glad we didn’t turn that truck around that day.

-Jamie

http://www.madacrefarms.com

Any Means Necessary

I remember this day like it was yesterday… We had both just gotten off work I was wrapping up a few things in the house. Ryan was no where to be found. As I stepped outside I heard loud banging.. I of course followed the sound to find Ryan with his sledgehammer doing what he could to break up concrete we recently had someone pull up so we could fix our water spigot. It was an absolute impossible task it seemed… and I at the time couldn’t understand why in the world he was even trying.

As the weeks went on the pile became smaller until we were down to oversized slabs of concrete. He actually made a dent in what seemed to be an impossible task. He never gave up. 

I would often ask Ryan why don’t we see if we can pay someone to help. I would get a similar response every time… we don’t have the money to spend on this right now. This farm has more important things we need to invest in and we can do this one concrete slab at a time. So I stopped asking and picked up a sledgehammer..

Moral of the story…Perception is everything… Pick up a sledgehammer and move those mountains 🏔️

-Jamie

http://www.madacrefarms.com

We Bought An Extreme Home Makeover House

If I am being honest… this house was not our first choice, it wasn’t really our second. 

We had moved around the country a bit for our careers. Then of course 2020 hit us like a ton of bricks. My job turned virtual and Ryan already had the ability to work anywhere in the country. Ryan had a dream of owning a farm from the moment I met him. Over the last few years the fire for this passion grew to a point where he could no longer deny it. He told me it was time to come back home to Iowa. 

We put the house up for sale in the summer of 2020 in Colorado (which I absolutely loved!) Colorado was my state but I knew what we needed to do. The house sold in two days. 

We were on a mission to find the perfect farm back home in Iowa. We put so many offers in and came up with nothing. Time was running out until we came across what we thought was the perfect property 16 acres and a pond! It was a little above the price we wanted to spend but we went for it and the offer was accepted! At that point I just knew everything was going to be okay…

As time grew closer to the move things were not progressing like they should be. We were finishing up our move from Colorado and we still hadn’t completed the final steps to purchase the home in Iowa… We ended up moving to Iowa putting our things in storage and separating our animals among our family’s homes and rented a house from a friend. Needless to say that house fell through and we were devastated. Thank goodness at this point our son was off doing his own thing and we were newly empty nesters.

We started our home search again and looked at farm after farm. Then this oversized home in the middle of nowhere came across our path. We had no idea what it was at the time all we knew was it was bigger than we needed and a little further out than we wanted to be..

I remember the moment I saw the property. I looked at Ryan and said this is it. It had a greenhouse a large historical barn, what more could you ask! We of course were informed at that time of the background on the home but that didn’t matter to me we had just went through hell with the last farm we tried to purchase. I didn’t disclose all the horrible details about our experience but one day I will have the courage to share it.  So back to the Extreme Home Makeover. We bought it!

We actually bought it in the middle of Winter. We got acclimated to the quarks of the home very quickly. The home fit its title well. Everything about it was extreme. We were new to rural living, we had no idea about propane. Our home in Colorado used natural gas and we had a gas fireplace that I loved! This home also had a gas fireplace! It was a win win for me! At least I thought! I remember we had just filled our 500 gallon propane tank and not even a month later it needed refilled.. I was running that fireplace nonstop and the furnace was running nonstop. We soon discovered that we needed to put in some major work on making this home energy efficient. We have been working on that ever since! We tore out that gas fireplace and installed a wood stove. That has been a game changer! This home needs a lot of updates including windows, siding and a new roof. We will not be acquiring new debt to upkeep this home so we do small increments of improvements. Baby steps people and I am absolutely okay with that approach!

I would like to switch gears a bit and talk about our neighbors. I will share more about the home in future blogs!

I remember thinking we are way out here in rural Iowa and everyone probably keeps to themselves..
I remember getting a knock on the door one early Spring day. It was what we now know to be one of the most kind, loving and supportive human beings in our lives. He was just stopping by to introduce himself. We were so glad he stopped by that day, it gave us the feeling of belonging.

Soon after that Ryan almost set the barn on fire trying to clear overgrown weeds. I was so upset with him…I remember him making a frantic call to our neighbor as he was previously on the fire department, we didn’t know it at the time but he contacted our other neighbor who was also on the fire department and they were there in minutes putting out the fire with a garden hose😂. That moment was a pivotal moment that we were not aware of at that time but it broke the ice. Our two neighbors showed up for us within seconds of a call and they continue to show up for us to this day.

One of our neighbors recently shared a picture with Ryan that he took back in 2006 during the Extreme Home Makeover build and it happened to have Ryan in the photo. Back in our earlier years Ryan worked a second job at Home Depot and he volunteered to help at this very home. Little did he know at the time he was helping to build his forever home.

Sometimes this house can be very overwhelming along with what we have going on to rebuild the farm. When those moments come up I gravitate to the people in our lives cheering us on which happen to be our neighbors whom happen to be our biggest supporters! They give us the encouragement to keep going and offer us sound advice and a helping hand. If I am being honest here… there are times that I want to throw in the towel but remember what type of community we live in and couldn’t imagine not living next to some pretty amazing people who we now call family ♥️

Moral of the story… You never know what life has in store for you. Sometimes the best things in life come from the hardest of times.

-Jamie

http://www.madacrefarms.com

The Fence That Fuels Our Fire

Sometimes, the projects that seem the most pointless can leave the deepest mark on your heart.

When Ryan suggested putting up a decorative fence around our bee hives, I couldn’t wrap my head around it. A fence? Around bees? It wasn’t going to keep them in, and it just felt like one of those projects destined to eat up time we didn’t have. But as with so many things in life, the real purpose of that fence wasn’t what I thought.

Let me tell you a little about Ryan—he’s frugal to the core, and that mindset has carried us through some of the toughest financial times of our lives. He’d planned this fence for months, scouting materials, finding deals, and eventually landing on a Craigslist listing that sparked his interest.

One crisp fall morning, we hopped in the truck and drove north to pick it up. Along the way, we passed this massive, awe-inspiring greenhouse—the kind of place that makes you start dreaming out loud. What if we could have something like that? What could we grow? What could we build?

When we arrived at our destination, we found exactly what we needed: the perfect fence. But the real treasure came from talking to the family selling it. They showed us their lush garden with towering Amish Paste tomatoes trellised so simply, yet so beautifully. As we talked, they casually asked if we’d like to see their greenhouse. Ryan and I locked eyes, our excitement barely contained, and practically shouted, “Yes!”

Turns out, that greenhouse we had been daydreaming about on the drive? It was theirs. And stepping inside felt like walking into a dream. Rows of vibrant, healthy plants grown hydroponically, the entire operation run with such care and ingenuity—it was breathtaking.

That greenhouse became a spark for us. A vision of what’s possible, a reminder of the potential we hold if we keep pushing forward.

Now, every time I see that little decorative fence around our bee hives, I smile. It’s not just a fence anymore. It’s a symbol of that fall morning, of inspiration found in the most unexpected places, and of the reminder that even the smallest steps can lead to the biggest dreams.

Moral of the story: The simplest, most unexpected moments can bring you life-changing inspiration. Don’t rush past them—embrace them. You never know what they’ll unlock. 🌿✨

-❤️✌🏼Jamie

www.madacrefarms.com

Team Work Makes The Dream Work!

Let the record show… I was 100% against the capturing of this bee swarm.. I may not have showed it on camera that day but inside I was screaming HELP ME!!

Ryan started his bee journey when we lived in CO and it was an instant hobby for him. He actually brought his hives with him from CO… and when I say brought them he literally had them in the cab of the UHaul with him.. it is because of that I knew I had to be his partner in crime this day regardless of the outcome I was there for it.

I got stung a handful of times after he cut a branch where the bees were resting. As soon as that branch started to drop I did what any normal person would do and run… I admit I didn’t wait for Ryan even though he was afraid of heights it was every Madison for themselves… I of course was the one that the bees took it out on and I was too cool for a bee suit. After that little incident I threw on an extra suit cause I couldn’t fathom getting stung again. I mean I couldn’t out run them.. trust me I tried..

We ended up capturing two swarms that day. It took the entire day but at the end of the season we harvested close to 100lbs of honey. Had that swarm got away we would not of gotten the outcome we did with our honey.

Moral of the story… Show up for the people in your world no matter how crazy it may seem or how far out of your comfort zone you feel… You never know what kind of blessing will come from it. Oh! And never try to out run a bee 🐝 #teamwork

-Jamie

www.madacrefarms.com