Skip to main content

Tag: off-grid farm

Agriturismo, American style: 8 farm and food experiences in the USA

Agriturismo, American style: 8 farm and food experiences in the USA

Agritourism is on the rise in the USA

Excerpt from article by Lindsay Cohn, Special to USA Today June 15, 2018. 

Willow-Witt Ranch wood-heated hot tub with mountain valley view

Willow-Witt Ranch wood-heated hot tub with mountain valley view (Photo by Dave Baldwin)

Italy may have defined the concept of agriturismo (a working farm that takes in guests), but you don’t need a passport to have an authentic experience that brings you closer to the source. Domestic agritourism is on the rise.

Potential reasons for the boom? The appeal of open space, starry skies, fragrant meadows and adorable animals is nothing new. But we live in a hyperconnected society and, while technology certainly has its benefits, the compulsion to be constantly plugged in has spurred a longing for simpler times.

“People are looking for ‘real’ vacations,” says Beth Kennett of Vermont’s Liberty Hill Farm. “On a deeper level, most folks are generations away from having family involved in agriculture. Parents want their children to understand more about what they eat and the environment, and how those things are connected.”

These days, travelers interested in learning where their food is grown and produced have an increasing number of options. Vacationers can hunker down at working farms and ranches throughout the United States. The result is a culinary immersion. More than just picking herbs and veggies from the garden, rural getaways allow people to reconnect with the land.

Meadow House farm stay vacation rental at Willow-Witt Ranch near Ashland Oregon

Meadow House farm stay vacation rental at Willow-Witt Ranch near Ashland, Oregon (Photo by Dave Baldwin)

Geography plays a major role in agritourism, which means your experience on a ranch in Oregon will differ from a dairy farm in Vermont. That said, you’ll find some commonalities. Topping the list are fresh fare, affordable accommodations and scenic surroundings. Think: Organic gardens, chicken coops, beehives, fruit orchards and verdant pastures for cattle to graze.

Inviting guests to stay is a chance for growers, croppers and cultivators to share their world with others. Farm life isn’t easy — in fact, most will tell you it’s hard and humbling — but it’s rewarding and, best of all, delicious.

If your fantasies are five-star fancy, agritourism probably isn’t for you. However, if you’re craving a truly meaningful trip (and you’re not afraid to roll up your sleeves and get your hands dirty), one of these picturesque farms and ranches might be the perfect place to spend your next vacation.

campground outdoor kitchen fully stocked for farm stay guests

Campground outdoor kitchen fully stocked for farm stay guests (Photo by Dave Baldwin)

Willow-Witt Ranch
Ashland, Oregon

Seeking an off-the-grid escape? Consider Willow-Witt Ranch in southern Oregon. Guided by a commitment to environmental conservation and sustainable agriculture, this 445-acre property beckons visitors to discover the bounty of nature. There are some 200 plant varietals on the grounds, plus tons of animals. Whether you prefer gathering eggs, feeding pigs or sowing seeds, you’ll find plenty of Arcadian pursuits to fill your time.

Book Your Farm Stay

USA Today

USA Today

Continue reading

Willow-Witt Farm: Powered by solar energy, passion for the land

Willow-Witt Farm: Powered by solar energy, passion for the land

Willow-Witt Ranch is a small organic farm on 440 acres in Oregon. Its emphasis is sustainable agriculture and conservation.

Written by Robin Dalmas for Business Circle February 2017. Posted in News.

Willow-Witt Ranch was a semi-finalist in Business Circle’s 2016 Real Stories Contest. This video was created by John Grimshaw.

Suzanne Willow and Lanita Witt went looking for a large patch of land in the 1980s so they could do small-scale farming. It had to be above 3,500 feet to avoid poison oak, and it had to be in the Ashland, Oregon school district for their daughter, who was 10 at the time.

“We were looking for 40 to 100 acres,” Willow said. “We found 440 instead.”

From the air, the acreage looks like a perfect Oregon postcard brimming with lush green meadows and thick forests of pine and fir. Snow-capped Mt. Shasta, over the border in California, towers in the distance. The closest town, Ashland, Oregon, hosts the Oregon Shakespeare Festival every year.

Because the land is at 5,000 feet, winter lasts about 6 months. “We found the land under 4 feet of snow and just thought it was the most exquisite place in the whole world.” In 1985, Willow and Witt bought the land and established Willow-Witt Ranch.

Today, Willow-Witt Ranch produces alpine goats for milk and backpacking, chickens for meat and eggs, and a variety of cold-hardy vegetables such as onions and garlic. They also raise Italian Maremma, a breed of livestock guard dog. The certified organic farm has kept operations small so it can practice sustainable agriculture.

The ranch also offers farm stays. The farmhouse studio sleeps six, the meadow house sleeps 10, rustic furnished wall tents sleep four, and a traditional campsite beckons for those who wish to pitch their own tent.

Visitors who come to stay are often quite surprised to learn the ranch’s little secret: It’s completely off the grid.

“People have no idea that we are off grid until we tell them. You would have no idea that your electricity was coming from the sun.”

The ranch has four solar voltaic systems powering everything from the barn to the guest accommodations. Solar energy powers the refrigerators, freezers, washing machines, and lighting. Propane gas powers the cooking ranges and creates heat for the clothes dryer. WildBlue® high speed satellite Internet powers the web surfing. At 5,000 feet, the sun shines often, but when it doesn’t, diesel generators kick in as a backup to the solar power.

But what about the toilets? “That’s a common question,” Willow said. “Toilets run on water and gravity; they don’t need electricity.” Waste goes into a septic system.

Despite its remote location, Willow-Witt Ranch leans on technology every day to keep operations running smoothly. Solar technology presents interesting challenges. “For the accommodations, we have a lot of laundry,” said Willow. “Every once in a while, we do have to run a generator for laundry, but we really batch it, and get on it pretty fast when the sun comes out so we don’t have to use the generator.”

The farm stay reservation system is all online. The ranch sells its meat, eggs, and milk on its e-commerce website as well as a small farm store in the barn, at the local growers market, and to Oregon restaurants. The staff uses an iPad with Square attached to sell items in the farm store, which not only includes meat and egg products, but organic graham crackers, chocolate, and marshmallows so kids can make s’mores. The iPad is also used to check in guests for the farm stays.

“Most people make hay when the sun shines. We do laundry when the sun shines.”

A designated contractor posts to social media such as Facebook and Twitter. That person uses Dropbox to access the photos for social media. In the early years, Willow did all the bookkeeping on paper; she now uses QuickBooks.

Willow and Witt, who are married, both had traditional careers. Willow was a physician’s assistant and Witt was a physician. Now that they are “retired,” the ranch keeps them busy 24/7. “We stopped working in town and now we’re ‘only farmers.’ That’s our joke,” Willow said.

While the two continue to farm and host visitors, they have a greater mission. Their main emphasis is on conservation and restoration of a unique piece of property. When they first bought it, they inherited a historic ranch with rundown buildings from the 1920s, heavily eroded land that had been used for cattle farming for 150 years, and a forest that had been commercially logged. Willow and Witt have worked tirelessly to restore the buildings, fence the wetlands and meadows to protect them from grazing, and restore the forest ecosystem.

In the coming year, the farmers hope to start a nonprofit with the goal of conservation, restoration, and education. “Educating people about land, conservation, and where food comes from,” Willow said. “That’s what excites me.”

Ultimately, the goal is to tread lightly for future generations to enjoy.

“We’ve kept our farm endeavors small enough that we were not going to be impacting the land. If we left tomorrow, and all our animals left tomorrow, and our vegetables left tomorrow, the land would be just fine. There would be nothing to cure.”

Business Circle brought to you by AT&T

Business Circle

See original article

Continue reading

Local’s guide to Southern Oregon wine country

Local’s guide to Southern Oregon wine country

Meet the undiscovered wine country of your dreams

Written by Rachel Levin for Sunset magazine, September 2015. 

Even serious enophiles describe Oregon wines with one word: Willamette. And one grape: Pinot Noir. It’s understandable. The Pinots produced in places like McMinnville and Dundee are among the very best in the world.

But another Oregon wine country is rising 230 miles to the south of the Willamette Valley. For the wine-minded traveler, this destination feels almost utopian. Here, tasting fees cost less than a latte; hotel rates are actually reasonable; wineries go way beyond water crackers (wood-fired fig and caramelized-onion pizza with a 92-point 2012 Syrah, anyone?). And, as in Santa Barbara County but unlike many other wine regions in the West—all kinds of grapes thrive.

“We can ripen anything,” Southern Oregon winemakers joke, and judging from the wide array of varieties found here—in this sprawling land of 150 microclimates across three river valleys, high desert, and mountains—it’s true. Roam from the Rogue Valley to the Applegate Valley, all the way north up Interstate 5 to the Umpqua Valley, and you’ll find about as many types of good wine as you would in your beloved bottle shop. Good wine. Albariño, Tempranillo, Chardonnay, Syrah, Viognier, Cab Franc, Malbec, and yes, plenty of Pinot Noir too.

What you won’t find are crowds. “We are the last undiscovered wine region in the world. Truly,” says Jamie McCleary of Jaxon Vineyards. The secret may not last, with tasting rooms opening all the time and 1,000 acres of grapes planted in a year alone. Talented winemakers like Stephen Hall from Napa, Scott O’Brien Kelley from Paso Robles, Jean-Michel Jussiaume from the Loire Valley, and Chris Graves from the Livermore Valley (who is heading up one of three custom-crush facilities) have moved to Southern Oregon, to be pioneers in a place where pioneering is still possible.

ASHLAND

Irvine Vineyards. On 80 gorgeous acres in the hills outside Ashland, Doug and Dionne Irvine built a Tudor-style home, and planted 26 acres of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay grapes. Then they wisely appointed a winning team: Michael Donovan, formerly of RoxyAnn, to oversee sales and operations, and Herb Quady at Barrel 42 to make the wine. Irvine’s tasting room is slated to open in early 2016. It’s a handsome, one-story, window-walled spot tucked above the vines, and it’ll have a patio, firepit, and tapas. We can’t wait. 2113 Emigrant Creek Rd.; irvinevineyards.com. We recommend: Irvine Family 2012 Pinot Noir (Oregon; $35).

Willow-Witt Ranch. For our money, the most beautiful spot to stay in Southern Oregon is a 445-acre off-the-grid farm in the mountains east of Ashland. It has four canvas tents with comfy beds tucked in the trees amid the changing foliage; gardens full of leafy greens; goats, pigs, and chickens—and a lantern-lit outdoor kitchen for cooking up all the ingredients you collect. Ideally before darkness falls and the stars come out. Zillions of them. Tents from $125; 12 campsites, $40; 1 studio, $200; 3-bedroom farmhouse looking out on a 100-acre meadow, from $250; willowwittranch.com.

Sammich. The Loop comes West. At Sammich, Illinois expat Melissa McMillan does Chicago’s sandwich traditions proud. She roasts her own beef, poaches her own tuna, and smokes her own pastrami, all of it best enjoyed on Sammich’s picnic tables and AstroTurf patio. $; 424 Bridge St.; sammichashland.com.

Smithfields. The motto of this carnivorous restaurant and bar is emblazoned on the staff T-shirts: “Bacon, the gateway meat.” It’s almost a call to arms in Ashland, an artsy town prone to attracting vegan types. But Smithfields wants you to go whole hog, with pulled pork, brisket, burgers—and, oh, a 14-ounce Umpqua Valley lamb porterhouse, if the craving strikes. Beware: The weekend brunch here—best relished on the back patio—leaves little room for dinner. $$$; 36 S. Second St.; smithfieldsashland.com.

TALENT

Harvest Restaurant. In a converted gas station, you’ll find the Rogue Valley’s best new restaurant. Harvest’s petroleum heritage doesn’t extend to the decor, which is country-chic with mason jars and fresh flowers. The food is simple and satisfying. Owners John and Ruby Biles make their own pastas and split-pea falafels, and pull as much produce from local farms as possible—not to mention Carlton pigs too, for the chile-cilantro baby back ribs. $$; 102 Talent Ave.; harvestrestaurantoregon.com.

MEDFORD

Jaxon Vineyards. Someone less visionary might have seen just an abandoned 1970s double-wide trailer parked on an old pear farm and moved on, but Jamie McCleary and his wife, Katherine, knew this 16-acre property could grow grapes. In 2009, they cleared the land themselves; planted Syrah, Grenache, Tempranillo, and Viognier vines; and brought on local star winemaker Rob Folin, of Folin Cellars, to make the juice. For now, tastings are by appointment on their terrace, overlooking their vines and the Fern Valley. In the spring, look for an open-air “farmstand” in the field next door for tastings. $5 tasting; 5709 Hughes Rd.; jaxonvineyards.com. We recommend: Jaxon 2012 Syrah (Rogue Valley; $28).

Dancin Vineyards. You’ll vow to ditch crowded tasting-room counters forever after a sunny afternoon at this beautifully pastoral setting. Here, you sit at a picnic table under a giant walnut tree, enjoying a wood-fired pizza and a bottle of Dancin’s limited-production estate Chardonnay or Pinot Noir. Owners Dan Marca and his wife, Cindy (Dan-Cin, get it?), are building a gravity-flow winery on-site, which should be ready just in time for this year’s harvest. Tasting from $5; 4477 S. Stage Rd.; dancinvineyards.com. We recommend: Dancin 2014 “Mélange” Char­donnay (Southern Oregon; $29).

JACKSONVILLE

Quady North. Those who do know Southern Oregon wine know Herb Quady. Born to central Californian Muscat-making parents and schooled at Randall Grahm’s Bonny Doon, Quady decided to move his winemaking talents north after falling in love with Southern Oregon. “The bar keeps consistently getting higher here,” Quady says of the region’s snowballing top scores. “There isn’t room to put out anything mediocre.” Pop into Quady’s brick-lined tasting room on Jacksonville’s cute main drag, and you’ll see (and taste) that he’s right. $5 tasting; 255 California St.; quadynorth.com. We recommend: Quady North 2014 Rosé (Rogue Valley, Southern Oregon; $15).

McCully House Inn. Location, location, location. Next to Stim Coffee, across from Quady North’s tasting room, and with a grassy park behind it, McCully House has the best setting in downtown Jacksonville. The seven spacious rooms were renovated in 2013 or just constructed, one with a sunken tub and sweet little patio. But the preferred place to sit and sip is in one of the red Adirondack chairs on the front lawn, where you can watch all the action, or lack thereof, in this charming small town. From $165; countryhouseinnsjacksonville.com.

Cowhorn Vineyard & Garden. The leafy country road that leads to Cowhorn is a far cry from Wall Street, where Bill Steele toiled through 2004, when he and his wife, Barbara, began testing soil in the Applegate Valley. They discovered that the terroir of this particular slice of Southern Oregon was remarkably similar to the Rhône region of France. The Steeles planted their first grapes in 2005 and now are known for rich Rhône-style wines, as well as for a rigorous biodynamic ethic. The wines they make are elegant, earthy, and vibrant, with a sense of the soil they come from. $10 tasting; 1665 Eastside Rd.; cowhornwine.com. We recommend: Cowhorn 2014 “Spiral 36” White (Applegate Valley, Oregon; $28).

GRANTS PASS

The Haul. We’re touting wine here, but let’s not forget beer. Southern Oregon has hops too! And you can taste those hops put to their best use at this straight-out-of-Portland gastropub featuring live music, housemade-soda fountain—and about a dozen American and Belgian-style microbrews on tap. Most of the beers come from Applegate Valley’s Conner Fields Brewing; the excellent food is the product of Rogue Valley food truck–catering company Fulcrum Dining. $$; 121 S.W. H St.; thehaulgp.com.

ROSEBURG

Paul O’Brien Winery. Scott O’Brien Kelley ditched the big-name wine countries to join forces with his longtime buddy Dyson Paul DeMara at what some call “the next great wine region”—aka the Umpqua Valley. With its marine influence, crazy mix of microclimates and soil types, and ability to grow cool-climate grapes like Pinot, Chardonnay, and Riesling (and ripen bigger reds like Syrah, Merlot, and Tempranillo), this northerly valley is the most diverse AVA in an already diverse region. The friends work with grapes from eight Umpqua growers to produce Old World–style Chardonnay–Pinot Blanc blends, spicy Tempranillos, and single-vineyard Pinot Noirs. $10 tasting; 609 S.E. Pine St.; paulobrienwines.com. We recommend: Paul O’Brien 2013 “Cask 11” Temprani­llo (Umpqua Valley; $36).

Sunset magazine

Sunset magazine

Continue reading

Only Hours From Napa, But a World Away

Only Hours From Napa, But a World Away

Slow Food and Agritourism in the Pacific Northwest

Excerpt from article written by Patrick Symmes for Condé Nast Traveler March 2013. 

While Napa Valley and Sonoma are renowned for their world-class wines, tasting trips there generally come attached to luxurious digs, spa treatments, $25 tasting fees, Hummer limos and standstill traffic — and all the “no picnicking” pretension that goes with that.

It’s gotten to the point where a thirsty, fogged-in San Franciscan in search of summer sun, stellar wine and hotel rates less than $400 a night has to go out of state, especially when toting two children under the age of 5 and a husband who prefers his fishing rod to the French Laundry.

And so, we headed north to Oregon, not to the well-known Willamette Valley, in the state’s northwest, but about four hours to its south, a sprawling region better known for the “wild and scenic” (as the official designation has it) Rogue River and the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland than for the rolling vineyards in between.

We found a relaxed, blossoming wine country with empty roads and crowd-free tasting rooms — some surrounded by strip malls, others by sparkling rivers — pouring excellent versions of an impressively wide range of varietals.

….

Back in Ashland, we headed up a winding mountain road to Grizzly Peak and our home for our last night: Willow-Witt Ranch, a 440-acre off-the-grid farm run by a couple of 60-something women who promised to let the kids watch the 24 baby goats milk in the morning. The ranch was stripped of all conventional luxuries, lacking even a front desk. But we had a wheelbarrow to cart our stuff, a communal outdoor kitchen (and noncommunal outdoor shower), and a canvas tent complete with two comfy beds for $125 a night.

At dusk, we traipsed through the woods to the overflowing garden and honor freezer to collect our ingredients for dinner (including eggs and a Mason jar of goat milk for morning). By the light of our lantern, we made a fire in the wood stove, started chopping and lined up our loot on the table: a tempranillo from Abacela, Quady North’s syrah, a viognier from Cowhorn, Schmidt’s albariño. As the kids dozed off, we uncorked one, and then another.

The New York Times Travel Show

The New York Times Travel

See original article with photos

Continue reading

Off-Grid Upgrades

Off-Grid Upgrades

Written by Claire Anderson for Home Power magazine Feb/Mar 2014 Issue #159.

  • home-power-magazine-2014-1-Lanita-holding-goat-kid

  • home-power-magazine-2014-2-Willow-Witt-Ranch-house

  • home-power-magazine-2014-3-ranch-house-fireplace-heater

  • home-power-magazine-2014-4-ranch-house-kitchen

  • home-power-magazine-2014-5-Suzanne-working-at-off-grid-office-computer

  • home-power-magazine-2014-6-solar-electric-controls

  • home-power-magazine-2014-7-storage-batteries

  • home-power-magazine-2014-8-solar-panels-and-shed

  • home-power-magazine-2014-9-alpine-goat-grazing

  • home-power-magazine-2014-10-Lanita-demonstrates-off-grid-goat-milking-operation

  • home-power-magazine-2014-11-goat-milking-room

  • home-power-magazine-2014-12-Lanita-shows-milk-refrigerator

  • home-power-magazine-2014-13-Suzanne-and-Lanita-at-shed-covered-in-solar-panels

  • home-power-magazine-2014-14-solar-electric-controls

  • home-power-magazine-2014-15-solar-electric-control-boxes

  • home-power-magazine-2014-16-generator

  • home-power-magazine-2014-18

Suzanne Willow and Lanita Witt are the owners of Willow Witt Ranch, a 440-acre sustainable farming enterprise that raises organic, pasture-grown pigs; Alpine goats for milk and backpacking; chickens for meat and eggs; and a wide variety of cold-hardy vegetables. During the 27 years that they’ve been at their property, they’ve successfully lived with renewable energy—and without grid power.

In addition to your home’s energy needs, you also have a goat dairy and meat operation. With potential large electrical draws such as refrigeration and water heating, did you ever consider connecting to the grid?

When we bought the property—27 years ago—we contacted the utility to see what the cost of bringing in grid electricity would be. We were four miles from the nearest power pole, and they quoted us a cost of more than $100,000.

So how did you expect to meet your energy needs? How familiar were you with off-grid living?

Suzanne had previously used solar energy at her rural home near Redway, California, from 1976 until 1983. The system powered a few lights, a radio, and a tape player.

Lanita had no experience with living off-grid or farming, although her family had farmed in Texas in the 1940s. She wished to return to a more rural life.

And that we did. In 1986, we moved from our house on 0.7 acres in Napa, California, to a 1920s farmhouse on 440 acres near Ashland, Oregon. We used kerosene lamps and had a propane cookstove and water heater. We heated the space with wood. As the old farmhouse was renovated, we put in wiring to handle either DC or AC, though we had neither at the time.

In 1987—after having been on the ranch for about a year—we decided to use Suzanne’s original PV modules from her Redway home and a battery to power a radio phone. Six years later, however, we were ready for more electricity. We built a combination greenhouse, woodshed, and chicken house, and with a south-facing roof on one end, this structure housed our first complete PV system: four solar-electric modules and four Trojan L16 batteries. We installed electric lighting in the house. We also were required by the county to install a sand filter for the septic system. Since that required a pump, we connected a generator for backup.

What differences did the PV system make in your lives?

We got less sleep as electricity prolonged activity into the dark of the night! (Laughs.) The greatest joy was doing laundry at home instead of at the laundromat that was a 30-minute drive away.

What other RE upgrades have you made since your initial foray into solar electricity?

By 1996, we had paid off the land by doing salvage logging on mistletoe-infested white fir, and selective cutting of diseased and dying trees, so we took out a new loan to put in a water storage tank and piped water from the spring box to flow through a Pelton wheel as it fell into the tank. The tank is located just above the pond, so the overflow from the tank still keeps the pond full. The microhydro generator has a permanent-magnet alternator that outputs wild AC current then is transformed to 12 volts DC and sent to our house system’s batteries. This provides a continuous trickle charge that is especially appreciated during the winter, when solar electricity production is low. We laid 4,000 feet of pipe to have ample water for our domestic use with 50 pounds of water pressure.

That year, we also upgraded our house system to twelve 51 W modules with eight Trojan L16 batteries and a more efficient inverter (from a Trace 2012 to a Trace SW2512).

What other changes have you made since then?

The home site sits along what used to be the main ranch road—on the northwest side of a large mountain—and that compromised our array’s electricity production. So, in 2007, we relocated the house’s PV array farther from the house so it could capture more solar energy—it now intercepts about 70% of the sun’s path. This is not a tracked system, but pole-mounted. During this time, the system was upgraded from 12 V to 24 V, with twelve 130 W PV modules, a new inverter and new charge controller, and 12 Rolls Surrette S460 batteries. Seasonally, we adjust the array’s tilt.

A 6 kW diesel generator provides backup, as well as battery equalization and recharging. In the winter, we use it about two hours daily—in the early morning and evening. Occasionally, we’ll use it in the summer, depending on ranch visitors’ electricity utilization, since most of them are not conservation-savvy.

In the house, we use standard AC Energy Star appliances, but still use propane for water heating, cooking, and drying clothes. We previously had a propane freezer and refrigerator, but have switched to electricity for these. These are also just typical, off-the-shelf brands. We time our “big” loads—like washing clothes and vacuuming—for when we have ample energy, that is, when the sun is shining and the batteries are fully charged.

So what motivated you to upgrade your house system?

Better-quality batteries were available when we needed to replace them and there had been inverter improvements as well. Plus, we were able to afford to move the modules to a better location. Propane costs had steadily gone up and it is difficult to find quality propane refrigerators. Propane freezers are expensive to buy and operate.

Given your remote location, how were you able to support your ranch and rural lifestyle?

In 2006, Suzanne retired from her career as a physician’s assistant, and began running the ranch full time. Lanita continued (and continues) to work as a gynecologist in nearby Medford. We decided to try making the enterprises on our land be fully self-sustaining, including economically.

We manage the forested acres with restoration logging and replanting to obtain a sustainable timber harvest, but in the recent downturned economy, the cost of logging became greater than the income.

We always have had dairy goats and organically raised pigs for meat. We have expanded to breeding our own Berkshire pigs, and we have developed a raw goat-milk herd-share enterprise and milk 12 goats twice a day. We sell our three lines of specialty goat and pork sausage at farmers’ markets and online, and have recently started community-supported agriculture (CSA) partnering with other local organic meat producers who contribute beef, lamb, rabbit, and chicken.

In addition to raising livestock, we offer “farm stays” for folks who are interested in a sustainable getaway on a working ranch. We have a seasonal campground with tent camping, as well as wall tents for luxury and comfort. Both opportunities provide agritourism income and educational experiences—guests get to experience off-grid farm life, the animals, and quality, farm-fresh foods, as well as the natural beauty of the woodland and meadows.

Where we live and how we live is both a choice and an adventure. It is an educational experience to share with those who visit us.

What energy systems support your more recent ranch enterprises? How did you originally meet these needs? How did you design/size this system?

We could not have expanded our meat production and the goat milk herd-share system without the energy upgrade, but we did use our house system and rely on the generator during the two years it took to get a grant and commercial system going.

In 2009, we obtained a U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Energy for America Program (REAP) grant to develop a commercial PV system for our dairy and meat enterprises, which require a commercial dishwasher, milking machine, barn lights, and refrigeration. The best solar site was 400 feet into the wetland from our barns, but it took nine months to get approval from the county for the structure. This was a huge delay that pushed the project into the late fall and winter, so we could not start construction until the following summer.

The 21 Samsung 247-watt PV modules are mounted on the roof of a new power shed, while the interior houses the rest of the system. It includes a Northern Lights 6 kW 120/240 VAC diesel generator and a diesel storage tank. But the PV system supplies about 90% of our commercial energy needs, providing electricity for three Energy Star-rated freezers, two commercial refrigerators, a commercial dishwasher/sanitizer with internal water-temperature booster, the vacuum pump for the milking machine and milking machine itself, and exhaust fans, as well as some lighting and smaller loads.

This system cost $85,000. The grant offset $20,000 of the cost, and we also took advantage of state and federal tax credits, which shaved more off the bottom line, although the balance was a ding to our pension fund and would not be fully recovered for a long time. That said, it has been worth all of the effort.

What kind of involvement do the systems require?

We have scheduled maintenance that we do every two weeks to check the battery electrolyte levels, the filters on the diesel generator, and the generator fluids, with oil changes based on the generator’s run time. Battery equalization is done monthly.

What are the challenges in relying on this system for your business and home? How much do you rely on the backup generator?

The technology is so advanced that we rely on the professionals who installed the systems for troubleshooting. This makes us less “independent,” but they are much more knowledgeable.

We will always need to rely on generator backup, as our refrigeration needs are significant. Milking, however, can (and sometimes does) take place by headlamp or battery-powered lanterns. Batteries are the main periodic expense and technology improves the quality of the inverters, so when we are looking for improved efficiency and can afford to upgrade, we will do so.

Knowing what you know now, what, if anything, would you do differently from the start?

Getting started, we mounted our renewable energy systems on existing structures, which resulted in less-than-optimal siting and, of course, lower energy production from our systems. Given a bigger budget, we would have installed our current system where it is now for both our home and our commercial electricity production.

What accommodations have you made for living with an off-grid system?

We have lived this way for so long that it’s normal—we don’t feel like we’re making concessions. We have flashlights for backup lighting and use rechargeable batteries and phones that are plugged in to recharge during the day, while our PV system is providing lots of electricity.

Home Power magazine

Home Power magazine

www.homepower.com

Continue reading