At the Benson Place, our farming practices are guided by the desire to grow and provide organic, nutrient-rich tasty food for our community while supporting native pollinators and wildlife and optimizing soil and farm-ecosystems.
Highly mineralized plants are more resistant to both insect pests and diseases minimizing the need for harmful pesticides and fungicides. In addition, these mineral and flavor rich foods support the vast array of cellular functions and processes that occur in the bodies of the animals and people that consume them, thereby enhancing our own health and immunity.
We work with crop consultants at Advancing Eco Agriculture, a leading company in the field of nutrient dense farming, to optimize plant photosynthesis. Using plant sap data to gauge plant health and assess excesses and deficiencies, we foliar spray customized mineral blends throughout the season. The sprays stimulate the plant to produce sugars which feed the soil microbiome, enhancing plant mycorrhizal communication, nutrient acquisition, organic matter production and carbon sequestration. The result of all this: delicious, nutritious food, healthy for you and our global ecosystem.
We are happy to have been awarded a SARE farmer research grant for 2021-2022 to learn more about optimal wild blueberry nutrition. Check back: we’ll be sharing our findings as we go.
We farm in partnership with multitude of native bees and other pollinators that inhabit this hillside. We are grateful for the essential role they provide in growing our sustenance. We are dedicated to farming practices that support and do not harm our native pollinators, and we are committed to establishing pollinator plantings designed to provide a diversity of nectar and pollen throughout the growing season. Every year we establish more plantings; our goal is to plant out an area equal to 10% of the area of our cropland in pollinator plants. If you are interested in the Benson Place pollinator project and would like to support our efforts with a donation or time or money, please contact us.
Bears, birds, porcupines, coyote, fox and deer and other wildlife have been coming to this hillside to feast on wild blueberries for many years. Bears teach their cubs how to travel here each June from various locations around Franklin County. The bears meet up on the hill for the mating season and stay through the end of the harvest in mid-August.
As stewards of this land, we cultivate the berries for the enjoyment and sustenance of both people and critters. Approximately ten percent of the area we manage in the blueberry fields is designated for wildlife use and is not harvested by us. In addition, we do not use bear cannons, bird streamers or other tactics designed to scare the animals.
Permaculture principles inspire our overall farm design which results in an interdependent farm ecology.