Whiteley Creek Homestead

LIFE AT THE END OF A DIRT ROAD IN CENTRAL MINNESOTA

organically grown triticale in our field
canoeing in our wetlands
raspberries growing wild on our property
our back porch fieldstone fireplace

When my eyes fell upon the old hands planting a seedling. I knew.

Baker creek seed festival brochure

When the paved road suddenly turned into a winding dirt road. I just knew. And then I saw the grey weathered barns. Could my smushed nose press any harder against our truck's window?

Baker creek seed country road Baker creek seed farmstead
Baker creek seed pioneer town Baker creek seed display shelves

I saw the main street of a pioneer town. The mercantile and flour mill. And across the street the Baker Creek Seed Company's retail store. Bin after bin filled with heirloom seed packets. Just a few miles from Mansfield Missouri… halfway across the country from our central Minnesota home. 

Baker creek seed speakers blackboard Baker creek seed little girl's attire

There was music, vendors, speakers, food… all of the components that make a festival festive plus plants and heirloom seeds in abundance. If you've read the book, Animal Vegetable Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver (if you haven't, you need to), you'll remember a Canadian farmer named Percy Schmeiser who takes on Monsanto. He was one of the festival's speakers. It was so interesting to meet the brave man that I had read about in the book. As I sat upon a straw bale, another speaker that I listened to was Hank Will, the editor-in-chief of Grit Magazine, who shared how he farms his acreage with hand tools and farm animals in lieu of mechanized equipment. I replaced my garden roto tiller with a spade years ago to avoid the major disturbance of natural soil layers, so I was intriqued by his comittment to living in a manner closely resembling that of our ancestors. Yes, it's more work. However, it eliminates the need for a gym membership, a noisy engine doesn't compete with birds' melodies, and it's a gentle way to be a steward of our earth. I loved this little girl's attire, so I snapped a photo of her as she played upon newly constructed concrete garden bed enclosures. And then my stride quickened to keep pace with hers, as there was so much more to see and do. (Heirloom seeds are those that are passed down from generation to generation, are open-pollinated, and aren't patented or genetically modified.) Post note: The Wall Street Journal, in its Thursday, May 23, 2013 edition, featured the Baker Creek Seed Company. The article explains the company's birth and phenomenal growth. Your jaw will drop when you learn the ages of the company's founder and owners, Jeremiah and Emilee Gettle.

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2 responses to “baker creek seed company festival”

  1. wordplayhouse® Avatar

    Oh! What a stop on your across the country drive! This sounds just like somewhere we would love to browse. Look at those rows upon rows of just seeds to admire. Oh, the gardens that will grow! Thanks for taking me to this festival with you here in this post. ~heather

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  2. Adrienne Cahoon Avatar

    Heather, I wish I could have also “taken you” to Laura Ingalls Wilder’s home and museum in Mansfield, Missouri while I was in the area attending the heirloom seed festival. Alas, our focus this year was solely Baker Creek Seed Company. It would be a perfect trip to coordinate both as the two destinations are only 10 minutes apart! http://www.lauraingallswilderhome.com/?page_id=39 By the way… those precious heirloom seeds that I carefully selected from the Baker Creek bins… are now seedlings that I have moved into my greenhouse to await planting into my garden beds.

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