About Us

Why did we begin?

We have a deep displeasure in conventionally produced food. The animals are treated horrifically and the taste is disheartening. Our mission is to produce flavorful meat products from animals that are raised in a happy, humane, and environmentally-thoughtful way.  We also value transparency;  you as a customer are always welcome to call and come visit the farm to see how your food is being raised.

Where do we sell?

We sell locally and directly to customers in the Missoula and Bitterroot Valley areas, as well as to customers all across Montana.

 

Our Story

Tyler, Kendra, & Rowan Tucker with Odin & Freya

It has been a gradual metamorphosis that has brought us to this point. After getting married, Kendra and I (Tyler) moved to Missoula so that I could start graduate school for something completely unrelated to farming.

These years were pivotal in my growing interest in agriculture. A family orchard on Flathead Lake inspired dreams of becoming a small orchard owner. At the same time I was introduced to Kendra’s relatives in the Bitterroot – who, if anyone deserves the blame for our move to agriculture, it would be this wonderful family. I supplemented arduous weeks studying with enjoyable weekend trips down to their farm.

It was at this time that I became aware of the problems with conventional food systems and I began to contemplate solutions. My studies at school became less interesting as my enthusiasm for farming grew. I spent all my free time researching farming methods, talking with farmers, and writing up my own farming plans. It was during a week-long study binge just prior to finals that I decided to pursue an agricultural training experience. Kendra and I began to look for farm experiences overseas. We found an organic sheep dairy farm outside of Regensburg, Germany through the Worldwide Workers on Organic Farms organization.  We applied to be interns. We moved to Germany in the fall of 2010 to train with Franz and Ruth at Die Grune Ecke farm.

This time in Germany cemented my desire to farm. It was also a crucial learning experience for how animals and food could be raised and prepared, different from anything we had ever experienced before. The farm was diverse. It was not only a sheep dairy, but they raised pigs, cattle, and chickens alongside their market garden and amongst fields of grain, pasture, and hay. Nearly all of the animal feed was raised on the farm. This was the experience I had been looking for: a diverse farm, capable of sustaining itself with very limited external input. I learned about making feeds without genetically modified grains, seed mixes to improve pasture nutrition, and alternative feeding options using fermentation. While we have a ways to go before we have a closed loop system on our own farm, it is our goal to become like our friends in Germany and raise as much feed for the animals as possible on our own land.

We also had a culinary awakening in Germany concerning pork.  I decided then to raise pigs (not my original idea). The only pork Kendra and I had ever eaten before Germany was store pork – the pork most of us are familiar with. The gray, flavorless stuff they call pork at the stores just didn’t do it for me. On the farm (and everywhere in Germany) pork is completely different.  The pork had color (it was not whitish grey), it also had flavor (it did not taste like chicken, it most certainly was not the “other white meat”), it was juicy, savory, and versatile, it was not the sideline meat but the headliner. We believe that it would be a great tragedy if anyone went through life assuming that the stuff at the store is pork. The first animal we decided to raise coming back was a “German style pig” using some of the feeding strategies used on the farm in Germany. If you have not had real pork, please give it a try.

Our first year back from Germany I raised a few pigs and a couple of turkeys while I was still working at the University. I was sitting at a desk during the day and farming by night. I could not handle the desk any longer, and started to evaluate the idea of farming full time. I did not think about the idea very long. Kendra and I, with my parents, Jerry and Kim Tucker, purchased 84 acres in the Bitterroot in the spring of 2012. Within two months we moved outside Victor and started raising nearly 800 animals: chickens, ducks, turkeys, geese, cows, lambs and pigs.

Now we invite you to join us in the journey. We hope that you, like us, want something more than food which, even though it is labeled as “healthy,” has been raised in horrific conditions, fed unmentionable things, sprayed, packaged, and transported long distances. We hope you, like us, want food that is raised how food should be raised by local family farmers.

We will always strive to give you not only the most healthy and humanely raised food, but food that amazes you with rich aromas and profound flavor. We invite you to join us. We are here to reclaim food.