Transcription of Farm Fresh Maine #186

Speaker 1:     You’re listening to Love Maine Radio with Dr. Lisa Belisle, recorded in the Studio of Maine Magazine at 75 Market Street, Portland, Maine. Dr. Lisa Belisle is a physician, trained in family and preventative medicine, acupuncture and public health. She offers medical care and acupuncture at Brunswick Family Medicine. Read more about her integrative approach to wellness in Maine Magazine. Love Maine Radio is available for download free on iTunes. See the Love Maine Radio Facebook page or www.LoveMaineRadio.com for details.

Now, here are a few highlights from this week’s program.

David:             We’re going to help train the next generation of organic dairy farmers for Maine and New England and we feel like we are a great fit for it. The property is really well-suited to dairy, even though we’ve never done dairy. We think that the benefits can be really far-reaching and long-lasting for Maine and New England.

Matt:               Being a farmer means that you’re dedicating your life to something and everybody has a specific purpose in life I think and to be given an opportunity in which you can do what you think is best for you, I think that being a dairy farmer is an exciting experience for myself and for these young folks that want to do it as well. Gives them an opportunity and it’s in a perfect location, Freeport is so close to everything.

Speaker 1:     Love Maine Radio is made possible with the support of the following generous sponsors, Maine Magazine, Marci Booth of Booth Maine, Apothecary by Design, Mike LePage and Beth Franklin of RE/MAX Heritage, Harding Lee Smith of The Rooms and Bangor Savings Bank.

Dr. Belisle:    This is Dr. Lisa Belisle and you’re listening to Love Maine Radio, show number 186, Farm Fresh Maine, airing for the first time on Sunday, April 5th, 2015. Maine has a rich agricultural heritage. It was considered the bread basket of the Northeast during Civil War times when it provided much of the wheat for the Union Army. Today, we are experiencing a resurgence of interest in farming as a new generation takes to the fields to providers with local nourishment. On today’s show, we speak with David Herring and Matthew DeGrandpre of Wolfe’s Neck Farm about the transformations they have witnessed and why they are passionate about Maine agriculture. Thank you for joining us.

Having been working with Love Maine Radio for several years now, it is a great privilege to spend time with people more than once. Today, we’re spending time with David Herring, who we had on talking about Maine Hudson Trails in one of our very early shows. Today, he is here because he’s representing Wolfe’s Neck Farm. David Herring has been in management and leadership roles for nonprofit organizations for the last 15 years. He became the executive director of Wolfe’s Neck Farm in 2012. Since then the Freeport based nonprofit has gone through major transformation that includes an ambitious new long-range vision and the impending launch of a major new initiative to support the future of organic dairy in Maine and New England. Great to have you back again here.

David:             Thank you, it’s great to be back.

Dr. Belisle:    First, I want to talk to you about why was that you went from Maine Hudson Trails to Wolfe’s Neck Farm. Anybody who’s been listening to the radio show for a while, probably has the same question that I do.

David:             Yup and you are not the only one that’s funny, I think my parents and my family still are kind of like, “So wait, you’re a farmer now?” It’s not that quite simple. You know Maine is one of those places, where I think people oftentimes choose the place more so than they choose a job in that place if you will. I was drawn to Maine for a number of reasons and I got the gig at Maine Hudson and it was amazing. Yet, it was time for change and I knew that I kind of chosen a career path that was a little bit unique. It took me a little bit of time to think through, kind of what would be the right next step for me. I knew I wanted to stay in Maine. I knew that I wanted to lead an organization that was placed based, as opposed to policy or advocacy or other important things, but I connect to places. The opportunity at Wolfe’s Neck really spoke to me right away because even though on the surface, it’s farming, it’s a place that needs to be cared for, it’s a place that people love that people are drawn to and that I knew that I could help the organization use the place to connect people to nature and to food and to health.

For a number of reasons, it made sense to me and what’s been amazing honestly is that since I took the job, my choice has been affirmed and reaffirmed many many times just because I think it’s been a great fit.

Dr. Belisle:    How old are your children now?

David:             4 and 18 months.

Dr. Belisle:    When we interviewed you a few years ago, you just had the one and pretty small.

David:             Yeah, she was probably one and maybe coming up on two, I don’t remember exactly when we did the show. That was part of it too. The Maine Huds gig kind of had me spread all around and I was at a point where I wasn’t sure we were going to move up to [inaudible 00:05:48] and stay with the organization. When I decided that it was time to find another opportunity, we knew that it was kind of the next domino to fall if you will and that I needed to get that job, so that we could get a bigger house, so that we could have another kid and kind of pursue our dreams and all that kind of fell into place.

Dr. Belisle:    Well that’s the sense as you were talking that I was getting was this evolution of a family, the need to settle in, the need to put down roots. It’s really great that Wolfe’s Neck was available to do that for you.

David:             Totally, I think what’s been really great is that it’s just a great fit for our family and for me as a parent and for my kids and because they love it there and they think it’s daddy’s farm, even though it’s not. I just get the honor and privilege of enjoying it every day.

Dr. Belisle:    I used to have a small writing cottage down in that area, so I would, in between writing, I would go out for hikes. I would hike out to Wolfe’s Neck Farm and [inaudible 00:06:53] and it’s so, I want to use the word bucolic. It’s so bucolic, it’s so Maine.

David:             It is yeah.

Dr. Belisle:    It’s something that a lot of southern Maine families have enjoyed for quite a while, watching the cows being born and watching the other animals come into the world, it feels like a gift.

David:             Well, it is a gift and it’s one that I think we could enjoy even more than we are now just by caring for the place and by creating opportunities for people to connect with it. The history of Wolfe’s Neck is interesting. It was a gift from the Smith Family back in the 80s and it was gifted to the University of Southern Maine. They had it for about 10 years and then it came back to a small foundation that the family had set up. At that time that was in the mid-90s that they turned it into a nonprofit operating foundation. It’s interesting, it was a gift that was gifted once, then kind of gifted back and now in some ways, I feel like the transformation that we are going through is one where we are re-gifting it again.

Dr. Belisle:    The thing that I found interesting was that you had cows and I knew the cows. Then, the cows went away because I believe Pine Land got the cows, but now cows are back, but in a very different way.

David:            Well, almost back, yes.

Dr. Belisle:    Almost back.

David:             Yeah, they’re coming back. We’re bringing the cows back home. Yeah, in the space between when Pineland left and now, we have had cows there. We’ve had anywhere from 50 to 100 herd of cattle there each year that we’ve been raising in partnership with other farms, to kind of help them bring up their capacity and continue support local food. But, it was kind of a place holder if you will while we as organization figured out why are we farming and for what purpose and kind of what’s our higher calling. It’s taken some time to get there, but I think we’ve really landed in something special.

We decided about, I think it was about a year and a half ago, we entered into some conversations with the folks at Stonyfield. Stonyfield is the largest organic yogurt brand in the country and the number three yogurt brand in the country. They started telling as about some of the challenges facing organic dairy in Maine and New England and the country. We, at the time, were looking for a kind of higher calling, related to farming and what do we dedicate this amazing farm property to. Long story short, we are going to help train the next generation of organic dairy farmers for Maine and New England. We feel like we’re a great fit for it. The property is really well suited to dairy, even though we’ve never done dairy. We think that the benefits can be really far reaching and long lasting for Maine and New England.

Dr. Belisle:    We had Cecily Pingree on the show and she was taking about the film that she had produced about MOOMilk, Maine’s Own Organic Milk. When I heard of its untimely demise, I was very sad because I think that this is something that we need if we are going to drink milk, you need to get it from a safe and healthy source. When this opportunity came into being that made me really happy.

David:             Oh good, me too. Even though the two aren’t necessarily connected, I mean it was maybe just happenstance that MOO was going away right around the time that we launched our program or announced the launch of our program. They are not necessarily connected, but it’s all part of the same industry and that’s agriculture and organic dairy more specifically. It’s vital for Maine’s rural economy to have a thriving agricultural economy and dairy and organic dairy are really kind of the backbone of that and that there used to be so much more dairy being produced in Maine and there isn’t nearly as much now. That’s an issue in a number of fronts and we feel that having more organic dairy being produced in Maine will have support rural economies. It’s going to support our health. It’s going to keep organic dairy on the shelves in the store, which is an issue in Maine and across the country. Hopefully, it’s going to mean that the market share for organic dairy products grows while the market share potentially for conventional dairy would then just shrink just a bit.

Dr. Belisle:    Tell me what that looks like, what is it that your organization, what is that Wolfe’s Neck Farm is going to do to promote the education of organic dairy farmers in the state?

David:             Yeah, it’s really twofold. One is and the official title of the program is the organic dairy research and farmer training program. The research side is one where we are going to really focus on partnering with people in organizations and entities, interested in doing research, related to organic dairy and specifically related to forages and pasture based management in ways to help create a more viable and profitable enterprise for small organic dairy farmers. That’s kind of one way that we are going to help support the current dairy farmers or current organic dairy or regular conventional dairy farmers. The new farmer training piece is one where … The average age of dairy farmers in Maine is somewhere around 60. In the next five or so years, a lot of those folks are going to be interested in retiring and they’re going to need to transition out and so with roughly 50 or 60 organic dairies right now in Maine that could mean that may be as many as half of them could be going away in the next five years.

This is one of the concerns that Stonyfield had was if we are going to continue to grow as a business and other organic dairy businesses are going to continue to grow, how is that going to be possible if the amount of milk being produced is going down? We saw an immediate and need there to kind of dedicate the property of Wolfe’s Neck to training these new farmers. Each year, four new trainees are going to come in and live on the farm for residential training program, where they’ll stay there for 18 months. They’ll work under the direction of a director of the program, but also a team of advisors that is a really group that we’ve assembled, an 18 member advisory board. They’re going to learn all about how to be a profitable and viable organic dairy business. I say business because that’s really what farming is, it’s a business. If you are great with animals, but you are not good with business, it is not going to necessarily mean that you are going to run a viable business.

We’re going to spend a lot of time focused on business planning, on financial management, on pasture management and lots of the hard skills and technical skills that they are going to need. I think that the industry isn’t necessarily hurting for people who have technical skills and people who love animals or want to be in farming, but it’s more that people need to understand how to be a viable and profitable business and how to manage a business.

Dr. Belisle:    There is also a certain amount of hard work that goes into farming that until you actually are doing it, it’s probably impossible to understand. This will probably give people the opportunity to really understand what that means to be going into this field.

David:             Well differently and it’s a good point. I mean I think we are hoping that we can attract trainees who have already maybe crossed that bridge and understand that this is hard to work that this is going to be something that they are going to dedicate their lives to. I think one of the things that we’ve been talking about, the team of folks that’s been putting together the training is that we want the training to be harder and more challenging than what they are going to face afterwards. We’ve been just putting a lot of thought into what does that mean and how do we make this as real as possible and even taking a step farther, how do we make to more challenging than real world, so that when they get out, they are prepared for what they are going to be facing, which is a lot of hard work and potentially hardships. But, want to make sure that the people coming out of this program are ready.

Speaker 1:     Love Maine Radio is brought to you by Bangor Savings Bank, for over 150, Bangor Savings has believed the innate ability of the people of Maine to achieve their goals and dreams, whether it’s personal finance, business banking or wealth management assistance you’re looking for, at Bangor Savings Bank, you matter more. For more information, visit www.Bangor.com.

Dr. Belisle:    We at Love Maine Radio enjoy a special relationship with Apothecary by Design. Join us in the offices of Maine Magazine for Seeing ME, Profiles of Resilience, which features photography by Smith Galtney, capturing the story, struggles and victories that formed the changing face of HIV and AIDS in Maine. This photography exhibit will be available from March 27th to April 24th at 75 Market Street, the offices of Maine Magazine. We hope you take the time to stop by.

Also, in April, we will be featuring Apothecary by Design Speaker Series with Dr. Matthew Siegel and Alice Chaplick, both of whom you’ve heard on Love Maine Radio as guests, discussing autism here in Maine. We invite you to join us on Tuesday April 7th from 5 to 7 pm at the offices of Maine Magazine 75 Market Street. For more information on our Apothecary by Design Speaker Series and Dr. Matthew Siegel and Alice Chaplick, please visit lovemaineradio.com or our Facebook page Love Maine Radio.

There’s also a family element to this particular vocation that doesn’t really exist in other occupations. If you are going to be a farmer, then your family is going to be a farming family. That’s different.

David:             Well, it is different and we put a lot of thought into the size of the model that we are going to be operating at Wolfe’s Neck. The idea is that we’re going to have 60 to 80 [inaudible 00:17:35] milking herd and that’s right in the range for a small family farm. What we want to do is we want to train these new farmers using that model and have it be replicable, so they would then go off with their families if they have a family and start small farms because that’s what Maine is well suited to. It’s Maine and New England are well suited to that. The topography and geography here in Maine is well-suited to that. Even though dairy has kind of gone bigger and fewer in terms of bigger dairy farms, fewer of them and more cows that’s not necessarily well-suited to New England and to Maine. Maine is much better suited to small family farms and that’s why we feel that setting up the model the way we are is going to be well-suited to them.

Dr. Belisle:    I always found it interesting that the Wolfe’s Neck property had so many different aspects to it. I know that the coastal studies for girls, there is a relationship there. There’s [inaudible 00:18:40], there’s a relationship there. I was there for the taste of the nation, so I know events happen there. There was an event that you did last summer, was held at a barn, where you can go to have a wedding done. That’s very Maine too that you can have different offerings in different areas in order to create a viable location.

David:             Yeah, yeah, I think it’s interesting, I had no idea how much goes on at Wolfe’s Neck Farm till I took this job. It’s a tremendous amount, especially when you [inaudible 00:19:16] the campground and kind of that visitor aspect of it and the thousands of people that come out there each year to go hiking or camping or kayaking or biking, you name it. But, in some ways, we’re kind of that model farm and that the most successful farms have a second income at the farm. Maybe one person in the family is the farmer and the other one is supporting the farmer, but is also may be a nurse or a teacher or doctor or something else. In some ways, Wolfe’s Neck is kind of like that, even though we are obviously a different entity because we’re a nonprofit organization, but we have the campground. We have these other recreational experiences. We have events, we have just other things that are going on out there that help support our farming and help support our mission and what we are doing out there.

Dr. Belisle:    There is a history of saltwater farms in Maine, which I think is very unique. I assume that you can have a saltwater farm anywhere that there is saltwater, but that’s different than big dairy in the middle of the United States. That gives us a very unique way of offering a product.

David:             It does, I think the Wolfe’s Neck property is really well-suited to dairy. I think people were kind of, “Wow, so you’ve never done dairy out there, it’s always been a beef farm, but you never done dairy,?” Well beef comes from cows and so does milk. The more that we are learning about raising cows on pasture and this isn’t just we Wolfe’s Neck, but we as a society, the more that we’re learning about raising cows on grass, the more that we’re coming to understand that it’s better for our health, it’s better for the environment, it’s better for our farms and better for our soil and there’s no place that it’s more important to do that than at a place like Wolfe’s Neck because we are coastal and because we got all these amazing natural resources surrounding us. It’s imperative that we take care of the soil that we take care of the farm and that we manage it in a way that’s going to help us be good stewards of those natural resources and specifically [inaudible 00:21:35] Freeport is a really productive [inaudible 00:21:39] zone. There are dozens of families or more in Maine that make their livelihood from them.

It’s critical that we are farming in a way that’s respectful of everything that’s going on out there.

Dr. Belisle:    We haven’t really talked about why one would care about having organic milk or organic dairy products. I’m sure a lot of people who are listening have some idea as to how why organic anything is a good idea. I know that when I have patients who come to see me and they drink milk in their family, it’s even more important I think to be able to access organic dairy and dairy products because this has fat in it. Dairy milk has fat in it and fat is where things are stored. If you drink something that has fat that’s not healthy, it’s got pesticides in it, it’s got antibiotics in it, it’s got things that might disrupt the hormone system then that actually is going to have more of an impact on you than maybe eating non-organic produce, but we don’t hear about this all the time.

David:             Well, milk is a big business and you’re right, we probably don’t hear that much about it. Since we have kind of launched this initiative or decided to launch this initiative, I’ve certainly learned a lot about the world of organic dairy. I have had a lot of conversations with people that they’ve said, “Well, what’s the difference, like what makes organic milk organic?” Really, the primary difference is what they’re eating. A conventional cow that’s producing milk, there are no restrictions or regulations around that cow getting access to the outside. There is no regulations around what they are eating. I shouldn’t say no regulations, but they can eat a grain based diet. That’s not necessarily what cows were meant to do, but that’s what conventional dairy has done when you look at kind of making it as profitable as possible. The lifespan of conventional dairy cows is more like 2 to 3 years. We found that giving them lots of grain is helping them produce more and more milk, but it’s not necessarily good for the cow and it’s not necessarily always what’s best for people either.

Organic milk really is, it’s milk that’s produced from cows that spend the better portion of their time outside. When they are outside, they are doing what cows are naturally predisposed to do and that’s eat grass. The primary difference is that cows that are producing organic milk are eating primarily a diet of forages. They are eating what’s growing in the pastures that they are having access to and what that does is it produces a product that has more better fats and just is a healthier product, not to mention that the soil that that grass is growing in can’t be treated with pesticides or fertilizers that don’t meet the organic standard. Not only is organic milk better for you, it’s also better for the environment, just like organic produce is versus conventionally grown produce.

Dr. Belisle:    I would also assume that cows that are eating grass outside, which is what that meant to do are going to feel less stressed than cows that are kept inside and fed grain.

David:             Healthier cows produce better milk and healthier milk. That’s definitely the case.

Dr. Belisle:    Does it taste different?

David:             I don’t necessarily know that it tastes different. What does taste different in a product that is just now coming out or just kind of coming out in Maine if you go to like a whole foods you might see at [inaudible 00:25:41], I see is carrying it. Organic Valley has a line called Grass Milk. It’s 100% grass fed cows, producing that milk. What’s interesting about it is if you drink it at different times of the year, it’s been said that the taste takes on the taste of the forages that they are eating at that time of the year. If you are drinking it in the winter, chances are that cow was eating [inaudible 00:26:10] versus in the summer and at different times in the summer or fall, it might be eating at different kinds of grasses that bring a different taste of the milk.

I think that when you go to the lengths of drinking grass milk, I think you’d notice the difference, but I don’t necessarily know that people can tell much of a difference between organic milk and conventional milk.

Dr. Belisle:    I don’t drink milk, I must admit, so I will never be able to know this for myself, but for people who are listening who drink milk, I would love to hear what their perception of grass milk versus non-grass milk, organic versus nonorganic, just because I think it’s kind of interesting. This is food that comes from somewhere, so all the things you just described go into making this food and then we put it in our bodies. That makes a difference.

David:             It does. It’s interesting, the more you think about the food that you are eating, there’s so many things to think about, how it’s grown or where it came from or what we have to do to grow it or how far we have transport it. Dairy has its own [inaudible 00:27:22] behind it as well. Just some of the stuff that we’re talking about in terms of what it takes to produce it and whether it’s conventional or organic and is it from cows that were grown or raised on a feed lot in Texas, where there are 2000 other cows there. They occupy 10 acres or is it from cows
that were raised on pasture at a farm in Albion Maine, where there’s 30 cows and 100 acres and they’re enjoying time outside and being healthy.

When you start dialing in like that it makes it easier to go to the grocery store and pay a little bit more because the cost of food has been kind of skewed a little bit over the years when you think about things like subsidies for corn and things like that. It makes it easy to make that choice at least for people that can afford to go a dollar more and buy an organic product.

Dr. Belisle:    David, how can people find out about the organic dairy program and the work that you’re doing at Wolfe’s Neck Farm?

David:             Well, obviously they can go to our website, so WolfesNeckFarm.org and we’ve got a number of new pages on there now about the organic dairy program. Later this month, we hope to begin accepting applications for the first four trainees for the program. If you’re listening and you’re somebody who is into dairy or into organic dairy and you know that this is a career that you want to pursue but you need a little bit more to get you to the point where you’re ready for farm ownership or farm operation, this could be a good opportunity for you to pursue that career and help revive Maine’s organic dairy industry.

Dr. Belisle:    We’ve been speaking with David Herring who is executive director of Wolfe’s Neck Farm in Freeport. Thank you so much for coming in and talking to us again today.

David:             Thanks so much, I enjoyed it.

Dr. Belisle:    As a physician and small business owner, I rely on Marci Booth from Booth Maine to help me with my own business and to help me live my own life fully. Here are a few thoughts from Marci.

Marci:             When was the last time you took a break from what you were doing, from the work that was piled up on your desk and just looked up? I know that during the course of my days, I often forget to take a moment or two to just breathe, look up at the sky and dream. Terrible that I have to remind myself to breath but when I do, I feel energized because in those moments I’m able to let go of the daily grind and think more about what I want to accomplish, how I want my business to grow, sometimes those are the aha moments. If we all took a few moments out each day to stop what we were doing and dream a little about our business future, not only would we feel a great sense of calm, but we may come to realize that these dreams can in fact come true. I’m Marci Booth. Let’s talk about the changes you need, boothmaine.com.

Speaker 1:     This segment of Love Maine Radio is brought to you by the following generous sponsors, Mike LePage and Beth Franklin of RE/MAX Heritage in Yarmouth, Maine, honesty and integrity can take you home, with RE/MAX Heritage it’s your move. Learn more at ourheritage.com.

Dr. Belisle:    We, on Love Maine Radio enjoy bringing the pages of Maine Magazine to life and today that’s just what we’re doing as we speak with Matt DeGrandpre who is the farm operations manager at Wolfe’s Neck Farm, born and raised in Freeport. Wolfe’s Neck Farm has always been a part Matt’s life. His grandfather Charlie moved the family up to Maine in the late 1960s from a dairy farm in Massachusetts and immediately began transforming and managing the farm. The reason I say that we’re bringing the pages of Maine Magazine to life is that you are actually featured in an article that was written by Sandy Lang and photographed by Peter Frank Edwards. That’s in our upcoming issue, so you’re a star. Thanks for coming in. We’re so lucky to have you.

Matt:               You’re welcome.

Dr. Belisle:    This is a little different than what you normally do on a day-to-day basis …

Matt:               It is.

Dr. Belisle:    As a farm operations manager, tell me what that looks like?

Matt:               While I was welding about 30 minutes ago, so it kind of gives me a little bit of a variety of what all of the things that I’ve learned in the last 10 or so years kind of following around my dad and my grandfather and my uncle. It allows me to do things that I love and that’s auto mechanics as well as some carpentry and plumbing and heating and electrical and stuff like that. My day-to-day kind of chore list is just keeping the farm a safe place for people to come in and enjoy as well as a beautiful place and maintain it so that we can get the same quality of product out to the customers that they want. Things change after years, so it’s a big property to take care of.

Dr. Belisle:    It’s a beautiful place.

Matt:               It is, yes.

Dr. Belisle:    It’s a pretty great place to work, to be able to look out there and you have the fields, you have the woods, you have the ocean, you have the animals.

Matt:               Absolutely.

Dr. Belisle:    What is it like in the winter?

Matt:               Well, the winter is kind of a quiet time on the farm, lot more activity with people cross country skiing and snowshoeing the campground, but it’s also pretty quiet in the barn. It allows us to be able to bring power tools in and start making upgrades to the barn, just because we don’t have as much foot traffic and it’s a lot colder. Of course, with all the snow we’ve had this year, we’ve just spent a lot of time making these kind of the wintertime upgrade. Our chore list that we’ve kind of held off between haying season and the busy season, allows us to do those sorts of things in the wintertime.

Dr. Belisle:    The first time that I went to Wolfe’s Neck Farm I believe I was bringing my oldest who is now 21 to watch the calves being born. Talking about foot traffic, you have a lot of people that come in and out to see the animals. You have a lot of schools and families and …

Matt:               Yeah, the education department at the farm has grown quite a bit. It’s always been there, it’s at a little bit of a different level now. I think it’s a lot more of a focused people in this state that want to know a lot more about where their food is coming from. I think that’s happened more or less in the last couple of years as people realize what they’re getting at a normal grocery store isn’t what they want for their kids or for their families. As that has transitioned, I think a lot more people want to come to the farm and see the animals and see how they’re getting taken care of and know that it could be their neighbors, the person that’s feeding them in the morning or it could be a student that they have in class that’s down there after school helping out. It involves a lot of people in the community, people that need volunteer hours or high school students that need those hours can come and work there. It’s more of like a family of people not that we’re all related but we’re all there together doing, kind of accomplishing the same task.

Dr. Belisle:    What has it been like for you to be a part of a family that works on a farm together? This is your grandfather, Charlie is 88 …

Matt:               Today.

Dr. Belisle:    Today as we’re recording this, I know that your uncle once was a manager also and your father has been involved. Really, this is something that a lot of people don’t have. They don’t get to see their fathers, grandfathers, uncles on a day-to-day basis as part of work. What’s that like for you?

Matt:               Well, it’s an awesome thing. It allows me to kind of work off of them. I see them all the time and we all live within five miles of each other. It becomes difficult to be able to find ways to separate life and business, but it’s a lifestyle that we live and we choose to live. My dad takes care of the campground, so a lot of times in the summer, I don’t get to see him. I’ve got a July birthday, so that’s during the middle of hay season, so I don’t really get to see too many people at that time. it’s more like the winter time is when we get together and enjoy ourselves a little bit more as a family, but my uncle is a carpenter at the farm, as kind of retirement, hanging around, getting things done, helping us make the improvements. My grandfather is still around, lives on the farm. I live on the farm, so it’s a unique experience. I think it’s unique that there’s three generations still alive, still down there, still working hard, but I think what makes it special is that as I struggle to get through high school and going into vocational school, I didn’t necessarily, it wasn’t a big concern to me about learning the math and the English, it was more how do I get to be a plumber, an electrician, a mechanic, a farmer. What part of this class teaches me about that?

People were saying, “You need to study hard and you need to do these things.” I’m thinking, “How quickly can I get out there and put my hands on these topics.” That’s where my family comes to play as they all excel in a specific area. As we all come together as one, well they call that farmers, I mean those are the people that can do a little bit of everything. It’s important to have everybody involved because I think that helps make you a multi-purpose person.

Dr. Belisle:    You graduated from Freeport High School and as you just mentioned you had some vocational training …

Matt:               [inaudible 00:37:40].

Dr. Belisle:    But you also did standards, English and math and all those things. Did you know when you were going through that you would someday be a manager at the farm?

Matt:               No, not at all. My junior year is when I started at the Maine Vocation Region 10, in Brunswick. I started there knowing that I wanted to go for automotive. My dad’s older brother Richard runs a garage in Freeport. I’ve watched him and his success there. I thought, “Well, if I go to be a mechanic and kind of maybe follow Richard’s footsteps, I could run my own garage.” I’ve always wanted to be kind of working for myself. It’s enjoyable to be your own boss and to make your own mistakes and to learn into and then succeed. I thought that if becoming a mechanic, I can do that in Freeport and that people are always going to be driving cars, so that’s why I went into the mechanic part of it. When I went to the vocational school, I then realized that there’s a lot more to it than just day-to-day maintenance. There’s lot tricks and a lot of different things that you learn on a vehicle that I use every day at the farm.

That program at the Maine Vocation School brought me to Central Maine Community College, which is where I went to college, only because my teacher knew that was a good fit for me. I had already paid to go to another school. I had already decided to go to Massachusetts and go to a certificate school. He said, “No, no, no, I know your family, I know who you are, I know what you are going to do even though you don’t think you’re going to be doing it, I want you to take the day off and go out to Central Maine and do that program.” I did and I ended up pulling out of the school at Massachusetts to go to CMCC and went there for automotive. That was when I realized working in a dealership like my fellow classmates probably wasn’t going to be a good fit. Schooling was mainly trying to figure out who I was and what other people were thinking of doing and what I was going to do differently.

Dr. Belisle:    That’s a lot to do. That’s a lot to handle. I mean you’re 25. A lot of people by the time they’re 25, still don’t know exactly what they’re going to do, still are trying to figure out what that all looks like. Was there some moment that some aha moment where you said, “Oh wait, I know what I want to do now.”

Matt:               Probably, a lot of it has to go to the fact that when I was a baby, when I was a year old, my uncle who was a operations manager at the farm passed away. When he left, not only was he taking over my grandfather’s legacy at Wolfe Neck, he was also running his own farm. He had two girls there. He had all his own excavation equipment. He had built himself a life before he was probably 30 that was something that I would want to do and have all the equipment and have all the toys and be able to kind of live that dream of just being able to do kind of what you want on your own schedule. That was what he was doing and when he passed away and as I got older and learned more about what he was doing, I thought, “Well [inaudible 00:41:10] he want to be a mechanic, he went to school to be a mechanic, why can’t I just …”

As I got older, my grandmother would say, “Oh, you remind me so much of David, you remind me so much of David.” I thought, “I never got to know David, but I got to know that I got to learn what he was was as a person.” I feel that since my grandmother has passed away and my grandfather kind of tells me a little bit more about what David was doing. It’s a lot like what I am trying to do and starting to do. I think a lot of it just has to do with the family, keeps on going even when we have a tragedy like that. It really boils down to what my family has been doing and how happy they seem to be. That’s what I’m looking for.

Dr. Belisle:    I heard the work toys. I think that’s what I think of my son and my nephews and just the awe that they have when they look at farm machinery or trucks or vehicles. There is this sense of joy and that you get to play with the big thing that moves. For you that must be great because you actually know how to fix it.

Matt:               Absolutely yeah, I enjoy the outdoors a lot and I have ATVs and snowmobiles. When I go on vacation, I like to make sure I’ve got a big trailer behind me with a bunch of good stuff on it, but a lot of it too is old farm equipment. I’ve got an antique tractor. My grandfather has an antique tractor. We go to the fairs and do then antique tractor pulls. Engines are a hobby of mine and so it’s kind of fun to be able to wheel and deal and buy things that I can use on the farm that will maybe make me money in the wintertime, plowing snow and stuff like that. It’s a hobby and it’s definitely something that I’ve always loved doing and I’d like to keep doing it.

Dr. Belisle:    How early do you get up in the morning?

Matt:               Very very, well it’s funny, I get up at 3 every morning to stoke the wood stove because I live in the oldest house in Freeport, no insulation. I’m up early, doing the wood fire and then it’s pretty much coffee time. Then I hit the door, I don’t know about 7:30 to get to the farm. That’s about 8, about the time everybody starts getting going at the beef operation or the feeding operation that we currently are right now. Once we get to dairy, I’m sure it’ll be hours before that but it’s the afternoon that takes over when you get home at like 7:30, 8 o’clock. That’s when you wind down the day.

Dr. Belisle:    That’s a long day.

Matt:               It’s a lifestyle. You are doing some of your own things, doing a lot of the farm things. You’re getting what you need to get done and what the farm needs to have done and stuff like that. It seems like a long day, but keeps you busy. You get up in the morning and you’re not punching in. I’m not punching a time clock or anything. I’m getting up when I get up and hit the road, when the job’s done that’s when you get home.

Dr. Belisle:    Also, there is a cyclical nature to it, so in the winter, you do a certain set of jobs and the spring it looks different and the summer and the fall.

Matt:               Yeah, in the winter, you get to sleep in. Then, in the summertime it gets pretty crazy especially I run the haying operation for the farm. All of the maintenance that goes in before you even start the day, I mean we might not start cutting hay until the dew settles and that’s sometimes 11 o’clock. You’re up and you’re sharpening and you’re greasing and you’re changing oil and fueling things up and that takes a lot of time, plus you’re trying to get other people orchestrated on what their day-to-day task is going to be, while you are out in the field. Then, the spring and the fall, it’s so muddy down at the farm, I mean we’re right on the water. We’ve got heavy clay soils, water just sets right on top of it. You are just trying to keep people from going out on the fields early and running things up. There, it’s definitely a seasonal position that’s for sure.

Dr. Belisle:    The weather that’s something that I wouldn’t have thought about does the clay and they are [inaudible 00:45:34] the fields and …

Matt:               Totally yeah. Thank God for smart phones because I have my weather channel app and if I am up before, I can watch the news or if I miss the news in the morning, then at least I can look at my phone and be able to know what the day is going to look like because a lot of it is weather dependent. If it’s raining out, you’re not in the fields or if it’s that December 1st manure spreading deadline comes up and you are out in the fields in the rain, trying to get it done as quick as possible, a lot of it has to do with what the weather looks like and what kind of restrictions you were working against. We’re on the water, so we have lot of restrictions. They can’t graze too close to the water and we have to be careful about the amount of animals that we have close to the water and drainage. If animals are to get out, we’re right on some pretty major roads and they are heavily traveled in the summer times. Actually, we have got a huge campground there, so there’s over 120 campsites. Start getting a lot of that kind of traffic coming in and out, it’s really crucial to keep everything in and safe and sound. It is, it’s very weather dependent, it’s very seasonal dependent.

The summer times are busy season, but it’s only busy because it’s so hectic. I mean the rest of the year, you’re still just as busy, you still work in the same hours, you’re just kind of doing it a little bit either different pace or totally different projects or working under a roof, which I’m not used to doing.

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Dr. Belisle:    You have to be pretty flexible, it sounds like you have to be flexible because of the rain, the snow, the time of year. It seems like some of what to do is planning and some of what you do is, “Okay, what’s right in front of me, right now.”

Matt:               Yeah, I think the majority of it’s what you get when you wake up and what it’s doing outside. When it snows, I’ve got a small plowing business, so when it snows, I am out plowing snow. But, I know that I have somebody else who covers, who goes and feeds the animals. You can plan things, but you better write it down because you’re not going to remember it because you get down there and there’s a water tub that’s frozen or a circuit breaker is tripped and you got to figure out why the animals come first and they need to make sure that they are fed and watered. A lot of it, it’s all about just writing it down and prioritizing things. Then, of course your 10 extra things you get every day that are things you didn’t expect.

Dr. Belisle:    It kind of reminds me of being a doctor. You can have a plan for the person sitting in front of you, but whatever it is that they show up with, you just go to deal when they are there.

Matt:               Absolutely.

Dr. Belisle:    Do you work with younger people when they come on the farm, do you work with people who might want to be farmers themselves or …

Matt:               Not my job in particular. I think there’s people. My job is the operations manager. I’m on equipment all the time and it’s not a two seater, well unless it is a truck. It’s not like I’m really bringing people around and showing them what I do just because my job is so kind of equipment oriented. If I’m cutting hay, people will sometimes will come and watch, but a lot all the younger involvement is with my coworkers, either that’s their job or they’re in the barn more than I am. My job is in particular to like go out there and doing animal nutrition or being the vet or anything like that. a lot of my job has to do with the day-to-day operations and safety and stuff for the people that are there.

My interaction with younger people is only when we have big volunteer days and that’s when businesses or schools are coming and they want to help us accomplish some tasks.

Dr. Belisle:    If somebody were interested in that type of work that you are doing in working on a farm, being an operations manager, since you don’t have a chance to talk to people coming onto the farm about this sort of thing, what would you tell that person?

Matt:               I mean we do job shadowing. I’ve had some people that have come to the farm and worked there that their high school asks them to do a job shadow. I love doing things like that. There’s always time to help young people. I mean I’m young myself, but somebody obviously did for me, so I am willing to do it for them. I think that my story is a bit unique because of how young I am in the position that I am in now and kind of how quickly it all happened. I’m always open to have people come follow me around the farm session because am pretty good at getting work out of people.

Dr. Belisle:    I like that so if somebody wants to come find out what you do, they have to prepare to actually do it with you.

Matt:               Absolutely, you don’t chop without boots on. That’s for sure.

Dr. Belisle:    It’s really interesting for me to think about your grandfather coming to Maine from Massachusetts with a specific intent of working on a farm. In fact, coming from a dairy farm and now Wolfe Neck is going to become an organic dairy operation again and in fact train other farmers to offer organic dairy. That’s a kind of a funny, it’s almost like it was meant to happen or something.

Matt:               Yeah, you know what, it is kind of becoming like a circle of events. I mean I think when I first mentioned it to my grandfather, he thought, “Are you feeling all right, what are you doing, you understand this is five in the morning, five at night, milking seven days a week, this is a total lifestyle, this isn’t just what you think is a lifestyle.” I was over there with a coworker of mine and he kept saying, “Well, who are you going to have to do this and who are you going to have do that?” We’re saying, “Well, grandpa, they have equipment that does that now you just don’t bring wooden seat and a bucket and start milking.” I mean this is like we are using equipment and machinery and it is definitely going to be difficult change for us, but Wolfe’s Neck Farm’s purpose has been to raise and natural meat and beef. That has since changed and to be doing something that kind of puts Wolfe’s Neck on the map, the state of Maine on the map, New England on the map, younger adults that want to be in this field, I mean this is an opportunity for people to share a similar story that I have and that is someone’s giving you the opportunity.

I could be in a dealership right now. I’m turning wrenches and there’s people that do that and they are happy doing that. That’s great, but being a farmer means that you’re dedicating your life to something. There’s people that work on Saturdays and there’s people that worked, lead the night shift. You think, “Oh, man I hate to have to work Saturday night or have to work through the night.” But they are looking at you saying, “I’d hate to be working seven days a week and milking twice a day.” I mean everybody has a specific purpose in life I think and to be given an opportunity in which you can do what you think is best for you, I think that being a dairy farmer is an exciting experience for myself and for these young folks that want to do it as well. It gives them an opportunity. It’s in a perfect location. Freeport is so close to everything. That’s why I’m there.

I traveled, I used to drive a truck for company and go out West eight months out of the year. I did that for three years and came back and said, “This has got a little bit of everything.” It’s a unique place and I think that even though my grandfather thinks we’re going crazy, doing dairy, I think what started the farm being such a success is that he had a dairy background and he knew animal nutrition and he knew how to take care love animals. He touched those animals twice a day, every day, even though he wasn’t milking them that didn’t matter. His business was keeping his animals happy and healthy. I think that’s what brought on a good business to begin with and it’s a good business model and that’s what we’re going to do, just milking. It’s that. It’s a good opportunity for the farm.

Dr. Belisle:    Well, I encourage people who are listening to, read the article that was written by Sandy Lang and photographed by Peter Frank Edwards for Maine Magazine, also of course visiting Wolfe Neck Farm. That’s always a possibility, although if they’re going to visit, they have to put their boots on and be prepared to work if they are going to be with you. We’ve been speaking with Matt DeGrandpre who is farm operations manager at Wolfe’s Neck Farm who is carrying on the family legacy. Happy birthday to your 88-year-old grandfather Charlie. I appreciate your taking time out of your very busy schedule and talking to me about what you’re doing. It’s very different than what I do in my life, but extremely valuable and it’s really wonderful that you and your family are doing this for us, thank you.

Matt:               You’re welcome, thanks for having me.

Dr. Belisle:    You have been listening to Love Maine Radio, show number 186, Farm Fresh Maine. Our guests have included David Herring and Matthew DeGrandpre. Read more about them in the April issue of Maine Magazine. For more information on our guests and extended interviews, visit lovemaineradio.com. Love Maine Radio is downloadable for free on iTunes. For preview of each week show, sign up for our e-newsletter and like our Love Maine Radio Facebook page. Follow me on Twitter and see my running travel, food and wellness photos as bountiful one on Instagram. We love to hear from you, so please let us know what you think of Love Maine Radio. We welcome your suggestions for future shows. Also let our sponsors know that you’ve heard about them here. We are privileged that they enable us to bring Love Maine Radio to you each week. This is Dr. Lisa Belisle. I hope that you’ve enjoyed our Farm Fresh Maine Show. Thank you for allowing me to be a part of your day. May you have a bountiful life.

Speaker 1:     Love Maine Radio is made possible with the support of the following generous sponsors, Maine Magazine, Marci Booth of Booth Maine, Apothecary by Design, Mike LePage and Beth Franklin of RE/MAX Heritage, Harding Lee Smith of The Rooms and Bangor Savings Bank.

Love Maine Radio with Dr. Lisa Belisle is recorded in the studio of Maine Magazine at 75 Market Street, Portland, Maine. Our executive producers are Susan Grisanti, Kevin Thomas and Dr. Lisa Belisle. Audio production and original music by John C. McCain. Content producer is Kelly Clinton. Our online producer is Ezra Wolfinger. Love Maine Radio is available for download free on iTunes. See the Love Maine Radio Facebook page or go to www.lovemaineradio.com for details.