Little Farm Next Door

Little Farm Next Door Kentucky Proud eggs, produce, jellies, charcuterie boards. Hens. Now offering apparel & accessories! Porch pickup always available!

Fridays @ Race Street
Saturdays @ Dry Ridge Mt. Zion Road
Message ahead for availability info or special requests!

Picked these sugar snap peas out of the garden this morning. They are delicious! Porch pick up. $2.00 for a container.
06/25/2024

Picked these sugar snap peas out of the garden this morning. They are delicious! Porch pick up.
$2.00 for a container.

Plants for sale! Sweet Red Peppers $1Coleus 2 for $1Tomatoes $1
05/24/2024

Plants for sale!
Sweet Red Peppers $1
Coleus 2 for $1
Tomatoes $1

If you're in the market this summer for purchasing young layers raised as pets, I'm your girl! Growing out chicks is my ...
05/15/2024

If you're in the market this summer for purchasing young layers raised as pets, I'm your girl! Growing out chicks is my favorite part, but it is a lot of work and not everyone's cup of tea. Lots of folks like to skip this step and I appreciate that! It's like I get to enjoy the babies and send you teenagers (that can probably be arranged too) đŸ€Ł

Currently in the baby barn:
Americanas
Starlight Green Eggers
Gold Laced Blue Wyandottes
Buff Brahamas
Rhode Island Reds
Calico Princess
Speckled Sussex
California Whites
Marans

All hatched early April and purchased as sexed pullets. Available starting June/July. How many do YOU need??

05/01/2024
Beautiful day at the Verona Vineyards Mini Market! My assistants are cute but expensive 🩆 So glad it's market season aga...
04/28/2024

Beautiful day at the Verona Vineyards Mini Market! My assistants are cute but expensive 🩆 So glad it's market season again! 🌞

03/04/2024
What a great opportunity!
03/04/2024

What a great opportunity!

đŸ„•đŸ„ŠđŸ„•Smarty PlantsđŸ„•đŸ„ŠđŸ„•

Beginning Monday, March, 4th, the library's annual free seed giveaway is back!

Who: Anyone with a GCPL card
What: 5 packs of seeds per household (supplies were more limited this year)
Where: At the front desk when you enter into the library
When: Until seeds last

03/04/2024

I hope that you're going into spring with bursting enthusiasm, no matter how challenging it might have been last year 💚 If not, try to remember that the purpose of "garden failures" is to help you learn how to garden and work with your environment. We need failures to grow as gardeners!

02/19/2024
Don't sell yourself shortđŸ€ 
02/13/2024

Don't sell yourself shortđŸ€ 

Friends I’m getting on my high horse and gonna have a rant. I’ve been thinking about this for a few days now and decided I was tired of just stewing about it. I promise, I’ll post cute farm pics after this to make up for my preaching! 😂

I am tired of seeing people say “we need more farmers” and then putting small growers down because they don’t see them as “real” farmers. According to the dictionary a farmer is “one who manages a farm”. The definition of a farm is “an area of land used for raising crops and/or animals”. There’s nothing in the dictionary about size.

If you raise a hundred head of beef on 200 hundred acres
you’re a farmer.

If you’re raising 25 acres of hay
you’re a farmer.

If you’ve got some goats and chickens and a big garden on 5 acres
you’re a farmer.

If you’ve got some raised beds in your backyard and a couple rabbits
you’re a farmer.

If your back porch has a couple buckets with tomatoes and peppers growing in them
you’re a farmer.

If you have a couple quail hens for eggs hidden in the garage of your townhouse so the HOA doesn’t find them
you’re a farmer.

If you have a small pot of basil growing in your kitchen window in your apartment in the city
YOU’RE A FARMER.

I’m tired of this opinion that only big farmers are “real” farmers. This is elitism pure and simple, and it’s silly.

We aren’t fighting against each other for a place in the market. There is the room and the need for farmers of ALL sizes. We really need as many diverse farms as possible. At this time I cannot grow all the feed I need for my animals. I need that farmer who is growing the 25 acres of hay to supply my animals with their feed. But guess what, if that farmer’s time and land are tied up 100% in hay, they may be happy to purchase some rabbit meat from me. And even if the hay farmer doesn’t buy my meat, somebody else will! And essentially I will have been the middle man in getting that hay from the hay farmer to say a customer in town in the form of the rabbit that ate the hay.

Besides the fact that it’s just plain rude for big farmers to exclude smaller farmers, it’s just bad for business. You think the person growing veggies in their backyard wants to buy a steak from you to go with their homegrown salad after you made them feel inadequate? Doubt it. đŸ€·đŸ»â€â™€ïž But if they actually feel part of the farming community, I bet they’ll post on social media a picture of the beautiful salad they proudly grew beside the nice juicy steak they bought from a *fellow farmer*. Free advertising AND community building!

I am aware that the needs of small farmers aren’t the same as that of large scale farmers, so a small farmer may not understand things like the stress of finding enough hay during a drought or worrying about the price of commodity crops. But large farmers may not understand the heartache of small farmers. If you have 50 apple trees in your orchard, and a storm takes out one, of course it’s gonna suck, but you’re prolly not gonna sit down and sob about it. However, if you’re a backyard farmer with just one tree and you nurtured it from a seed that you got from your great granny’s tree
you’re going to be absolutely devastated. And, even if the storm takes out all 50 trees on the bigger farm, there’s a chance there’s crop loss insurance or a government program you might be able to get some relief from. That small farmer isn’t getting anything for their tree. Plus, big farmers get bulk discounts on purchases, small farmers, unless they team up with others, they pay full retail price. Yes, the challenges are different based on the size of the farm, but the amount of stress from the challenge is the EXACT same to the farmer, no matter if they’re a big or small farm.

One final thing before I go take the cute pics that I now owe y’all, and this is directed at the small farmers. If the word “homesteader” means something important to you, and you love it, use it! But, if you’re using it because you don’t feel like you have the right to call yourself a farmer
stop. You’re a farmer too. If you want to be sure people know you’re a small operation, feel free to call yourself an urban farmer, micro farmer, mini farmer, whatever! But you’re still a freakin farmer. You have just as much right to the title as the big guys. And there’s a spot for you! Small farmers fill niches that the large scale farmers simply can’t even if they wanted to. We all have a place and we should be supporting each other instead of dividing ourselves based on something silly like the size of the land we are farming.

Ok, that’s it. I’ll go take bunny and chick pics now after subjecting y’all to that đŸ’đŸ»â€â™€ïžđŸ˜‚

Inspired by a friend asking for sourdough tips, I'm starting a Sourdough Sundays series! Let's start by discussing the s...
02/11/2024

Inspired by a friend asking for sourdough tips, I'm starting a Sourdough Sundays series! Let's start by discussing the starter (naturally😆).

Did you know the pioneers used sourdough starter as they traversed across the country? Did you know the ancient Egyptians used sourdough starter over 3,000 years ago? Until cultured yeast became commercially available in the 1870's, sourdough starter was what made all of our leavened breads!

You may have read that you'll need to feed your starter twice at day every day and that every time you'll discard (throw away) half of the starter. You may have even seen a counter-top sourdough starter "refrigerator" to keep your starter at the perfect 70°F. I'm here to tell you that is all excessive and dramatic and that it is REALLY easy to keep a starter!

My starters get fed at minimum twice per week. Feeding is when you give the active starter more flour to ferment. I try to feed it 4-12 hours before I want to make bread so that it's nice and active.

Before feeding, they say to discard half of the starter. Do you think the pioneers were tossing out precious resources like flour and fresh water? Absolutely not! You do NOT have to throw away a portion of your starter ever. This is largely done to allow for room in your container because the starter should double in size when you feed it.

First, I do not feed my starter until I am ready to use it. Second, there are lots of great recipes that use the discarded starter (I'm perfecting a foccacia recipe to share soon). Third, if it's going to overflow my jar, often I'll just separate a little into a separate container and feed it too so I have starter ready to share with friends or have some ready to take to the market.

There was only one time I actually tossed the discard. It was a feeding emergency and I didn't feel like making anything or saving the discard in the fridge.

Next time, we'll pick up at HOW exactly to feed your starter.

Address

Dry Ridge, KY
41035

Opening Hours

Friday 2pm - 6pm
Saturday 9am - 1pm

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Little Farm Next Door posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category