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Organic Farm School Embraces Change

In this year of change, the Organic Farm School on Whidbey Island has had its share. It shifted to
include online instruction, created new distribution channels and changed its crop plan to focus on
feeding the local island community. The biggest change has been the return of a former student to
serve as interim farm manager. Farming is a rewarding career for anyone who loves the outdoors
and is not afraid of hard work. The school is recruiting now for the class of spring 2021.

Langley, WA, August 09, 2020 --(PR.com)-- In this year of change, the Organic Farm School (OFS) on
Whidbey Island has had its share. The first in March was considering how they could shift to online
instruction, before they figured out a way to safely move students to live on the farm for their total
immersion training in the field.

Next, as their priority shifted to feeding the local island community rather than selling to buyers in nearby
Seattle, they revised their seasonal crop plan, adding more shelf stable produce. This led to creating new
forms of distribution, such as a touchless drive-through farm stand with weekly online pre-ordering. The
school also jumped in to support the Northwest Agriculture Business Center’s launch of the Whidbey
Island Grown Cooperative, the first island-wide food hub.

“COVID-19 has drawn our attention to so many things that our communities probably should have been
paying attention to in the first place, like the value of a local, fresh food supply system,” said OFS
Executive Director Judy Feldman. “Innovations like the new food hub are powerful and strategic moves
to value farmers and feed our neighbors. This is something many across the country are just now
realizing.”

Perhaps the most dramatic change came as their farm manager, Aaron Varadi, accepted an exciting new
job with High Mowing Seed Organic Seeds in mid-season. His passion for the ethical stewardship of
genetic resources had been key in perpetuating a seed development and production project at the school.

Most people would find this much turmoil too overwhelming. But for the school’s executive director, it’s
just life on the farm.

“Farmers must be resilient and ready for change,” said Feldman. “Regenerative farming practices are all
about paying attention to change and implementing the most life-affirming responses. Every year, not just
this one, is going to be filled with challenges. We teach our students to embrace this and see disruptions
as opportunities for trying new approaches.”

In this case, the adjustments are working out better than anyone could have imagined. Farm production
and sales are way up, as local residents find new value in locally-grown food. Recruitment looks to be on
track to fill next year’s class (those interested can apply today), as people begin to recognize farming as a
noble profession and viable career path. And, the most exciting news, the school has recruited a former
star student, Peyton Cypress, as interim farm manager.

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“Peyton is perfect for this job. He’s keenly aware of how vulnerable our food system is, and embraces our
emphasis on regenerative ag practices,” said Feldman. “We’re excited to have his ambitious outlook and
fresh perspective as he helps mentor future farmers.”

Cypress says he’s looking forward to encouraging and facilitating the growth of young farmers through
positive action, engagement and conversation.

“What excites me most about returning is the opportunity to carry out the school’s mission through the
sharing of my personal experiences and interpersonal interactions,” he said. “I believe this school is
playing a vital role in shaping a strong agricultural future.”

Before attending the farm school in 2017, Peyton was a collegiate pitcher, with sights set on a future in
baseball. As an athlete, he always valued quality food. However, as he completed his degree in science,
he dove deeper into the topic and became increasingly alarmed with society’s lack of understanding of
food.

“This ultimately led me to search for a program that allowed my curiosity for health and science to
flourish,” he said. “I wanted to challenge my own understanding of food, community, and ecology. In the
end, after months of research, the Organic Farm School was the idyllic choice.”

After graduation he accepted an apprenticeship at Ferme des Quatre Temps in Quebec, where his
knowledge for intensive vegetable production and animal integration grew.

“I was able to work side-by-side with Jean Martin-Fortier to develop a compost system. By utilizing the
farm’s excess and various manures, combined with their post market and consumer waste, we created a
loop that attempted to bring the farm closer to a closed system,” Cypress said.

Martin-Fortier is an internationally recognized authority on small-scale agriculture who wrote “The


Market Gardener.” The book is considered to be the most influential farming book of the last decade.
Here Cypress learned to embrace a vision of farming practices that focuses on doing things better, not
bigger, yet still remaining profitable.

“I very much look forward to bringing the knowledge of vegetable production and ‘closed loop’
understanding to the farm school,” said Cypress. “I want to plant the thought in a future generation of
farmers that fertility can happen on the farm, instead of sourcing from far away, which is what ‘closed
loop’ is all about.”

As luck would have it, the Washington State Department of Agriculture awarded OFS a three-year grant
to compare productivity of the very techniques used by Martin-Fortier, versus more modern cultivation
practices.

“It’s quite serendipitous that Peyton will help oversee this grant project with us, after having first learned
to use tractors with us, and then experiencing firsthand how the non-mechanized/walk behind equipment

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differs, and how the ‘closed loop’ side of it all plays out,” said Feldman.

Cypress next landed at Stone Barns Center for Agriculture in New York, where his curiosity grew
rapidly. He participated in the farm’s success by learning the intricacies and theories of crop rotation,
perennial integration, and long term animal and pasture rotation. Chef Dan Barber is co-owner of Blue
Hill restaurant located at the nonprofit education center, as well as in Manhattan. Barber, author of “The
Third Plate,” is known for his radical views of a new paradigm where great farming and delicious cuisine
intersect.

“I plan to bring new ideas to the farm school that revolve around the thought of long-term fertility and
diversification,” said Cypress. “I was able to share a few conversations with Chef Barber, but the majority
of my time was spent with the impeccable farmers Jack Algiere, Jason Grauer, and Mike Peterson. They
are incredibly smart and passionate people.”

His final transition prior to his new post at the farm school on Whidbey Island, was a managerial role at
Southall Farm, the destination retreat center outside of Nashville.

There he was given a vast amount of freedom to design and develop the systems they continue to use
today. He designed their garden, mapped out the rotation of crops and implemented a program to supply a
40-box CSA, with plenty of extra produce for the chefs to integrate into meals.

Cypress is eager to meet the current students pursing a farming career path at the OFS, and shares their
optimism about the future of American agriculture. Having been a captain of sports teams his entire life,
he understands the necessity of positive energy, the importance of recognition and the vital role of
correcting mistakes in a productive, proactive manner.

“Farming is an honorable way to make a living and support your community,” said Feldman. “If you
enjoy the outdoors and are not afraid of hard work, then growing food from the land is a sustainable,
rewarding career. The pandemic has shown us how many people work in rather hazardous positions for
low wages, with very little fulfillment. Why not instead choose something that offers a whole lot more
meaning, is safe, feeds your soul, and serves the people in your community? Why not choose farming?”

For more information or to make a contribution, visit organicfarmschool.org.

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Contact Information:
Sherrye Wyatt Public Relations & Writing
Sherrye Wyatt
(360) 929-9924
Contact via Email
www.organicfarmschool.org
Judy@organicfarmschool.org

Online Version of Press Release:


You can read the online version of this press release at: https://www.pr.com/press-release/818699

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