I’ve been farming long enough now (on other people’s farms) to have a pretty good idea of what kind of infrastructure and equipment I wanted. I have seen how many farms create space for their CSA members, wash their produce, store their equipment, and select tools to manage their field operations. Now, I know that many farmers follow the “boot-strap” method of finance - just buying the equipment and buildings they can pay for out of pocket, adding more as time goes on. I decided to do it differently.
The more I thought about it, the more I came to believe that spending big and taking on debt was worth it, because it would allow me to operate my farm at a scale that would be economically viable, with a level of labor that I could handle.
So I made that giant list of everything I thought I needed, and put a price tag next to each one…...and it was big: $104,868. And this didn’t include annual operating costs or working capital! Was this did get me was: a pump set-up for the well, (2) 30’x96’ greenhouses, a 14’x24’ CSA shed, a 24’x24’ washing/storage shed, a fence, a tractor, a tiller, a chisel plow, a cultivator, a manure spreader, a lime spreader, a disk, a bed shaper, a mulch layer, and many, many more hand tools and supplies.
Now, I’d been saving money for many years as best I could. But this amounted to just $33,000. Still a long way to go. Then, in a stroke of good fortune, I entered, competed in, and won one of the Grand Prizes in “Economic Fuel - The Humboldt Student Business Plan Competition”. More on this later, perhaps, but this added another $25K!
I was still $47,000 shy of my start-up hard costs. I also needed an additional ~25K to cover operating costs and keep me from going broke until my sales grew. So I applied for loan funding. With the help of an awesome non-profit called “California FarmLink”, I was able to apply for and receive loan funding from CalCoastal Rural Development Corporation - a financial development bank specializing in ag loans.
So here I am today, with the funding I need. The infrastructure is nearly complete, the major tools and supplies purchased. Now it’s all about getting the word out: signing up members for awesome weekly harvests through my CSA, and exploring additional markets.
In a future post, I’ll share a nice long list of some of those actual costs.
They are turning the dirt and hoping to be successful enough to turn a profit, and to become a valuable part of their communities as suppliers of organically grown food.
Peaceful Valley is giving them a head start by offering them special pricing as part of this Freshman Farmer program.
| Freshman: | |
| New Farms Coming Soon! | |
| Sophomores: | |
![]() | Daily Grace Farms Crescent City, CA |
![]() | Freestone Family Farm Vernal, UT |
![]() | Wise Moon Farm Redding, CA |
| Graduates: | |
![]() | Coyote House Farm Palermo, CA |
![]() | DeepSeeded Community Farm Arcata, CA |
![]() | Driftwood Farm Fort Bragg, CA |
![]() | EarthDance Farm St. Louis, MO |
![]() | Ellwood Canyon Farms Goleta, CA |
![]() | Four Frog Farm Penn Valley, CA |
![]() | Hand Sown Homegrown Heritage Farm Poulsbo, WA |
![]() | Home Plate Organic Farm Orleans, CA |
![]() | Honey in the Heart Farm Nevada City, CA |
![]() | Willow Springs Farm Penn Valley, CA |
| Coyote House Farm Palermo, CA |
| Daily Grace Farms Crescent City, CA |
| DeepSeeded Community Farm Arcata, CA |
| Driftwood Farm Fort Bragg, CA |
| EarthDance Farm St. Louis, MO |
| Ellwood Canyon Farms Goleta, CA |
| Four Frog Farm Penn Valley, CA |
| Freestone Family Farm Vernal, UT |
| Hand Sown Homegrown Heritage Farm Poulsbo, WA |
| Home Plate Organic Farm Orleans, CA |
| Honey in the Heart Farm Nevada City, CA |
| Willow Springs Farm Penn Valley, CA |
| Wise Moon Farm Redding, CA |