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🍃 Habitat farmers cultivate and tend to everything on their land—not just their crops and vegetables but also the switchgrass and wildflowers that attract pollinators and wildlife that is so critical to our food chain.
Farms with a sunflower plot, a field of clover, or a buffer of switchgrass attract birds, bees, and other species that live and forage on their land, making their soil richer and their crop yield more productive.
We call it “farming with nature”—and it’s what makes a Habitat Farmer’s impact so important.
That beneficial habitat that nature thrives on also serves a secondary purpose to the environment: It helps make farmland more environmentally friendly. Deep-rooted vegetation such as switchgrass acts as a sponge, removing chemical run-off before it gets to local waterways. Wild plants and flowers also naturally pull carbon from the air and make each of our farmers a productive environmental partner who is helping to mitigate climate change with each new acre of habitat we plant or leave untouched.
We believe there’s a place and a need for all farmers and all farming methods—from small organic farms in Pennsylvania to large acreage conventional farms in Iowa. The more farmers we support, the more habitat acres we are able to plant, the more positive environmental impact we are able to make across communities.
HABITAT FARMING PARTNERS
Nina Berryman
Weavers Way Farm, Philadephia, PA
As a farmer, Nina brings her environmental expertise to agriculture and is doing her dream job. She grew up in rural northern Vermont, where she knew she always wanted to work in the environmental field. After completing her undergraduate degree in Environmental Studies at McGill University, Nina entered a certificate program in Ecological Gardening and Permaculture at the Linnaea Farm in British Columbia. Her passion for plants and all things farming and its community-building benefits led her to Weavers Way Farm, where she oversees the management of Weavers Farm sites in NW Philadelphia, including two vegetable farms, an orchard, CSA, and farm market.
Hunter Webster
Mercersburg, PA
Hunter is a conservation-minded farmer who balances the needs for his land, its animals, and the wildlife who call his farm in Mercersburg, PA home. He raises Black Angus cows in addition to growing corn and soybeans. Hunter was born and raised in the mountainous area of south-central Pennsylvania, an area with deep history and agricultural ties to his ancestors. A third-generation farmer who understands how agriculture impacts conservation, he is the perfect fit as a Habitat Farmer.