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MoneyThursday, August 30, 2007 9:17 AM CDT
More young people entering farming
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PERKASIE, Pa. -- Tom Murtha studied English at Penn. Tricia Borneman majored in journalism at Shippensburg University.

Like most college grads, they finished school with a good idea of where they wanted their career paths to lead. Unlike most college grads, it was a dirt path.

So on a recent summer day, instead of working in an air-conditioned office building 40 miles away in Philadelphia, the pair were tending to kale, collard greens and broccoli in Bucks County.

"We went to college, we were on track to have some sort of professional careers, but it just didn't resonate," Murtha said. "The thing about farming is it engages you on all levels, which doesn't happen with a lot of jobs."

Murtha, 34, and Borneman, 32, are among a new crop of farmers sprouting up around the country who weren't raised on farms and in some cases have left other careers behind.

"Agriculture has been so subsidized, corporatized and globalized," Murtha said. "There's definitely an interest and desire for younger folks to get involved in agriculture."

Murtha and Borneman have been farming together for eight years, the last two at the 70-acre Blooming Glen Farm in Perkasie. Parents of a 2-year-old daughter, they lived in Oregon and New Jersey before returning to Pennsylvania, where they visit farmers markets and operate a community-supported agriculture program in which locals do farm work during the growing season in exchange for produce from spring through fall.

"Beyond the family aspect, it's enjoyable because it's so all-encompassing: the office work, the selling, the planting, the mechanical aspects," Borneman said. "Even when it's hot and I'm working hard, I can still hear the birds."

Blooming Glen eschews synthetic fertilizers or pesticides, and is seeking certification as organic. Its operators are among many smaller-scale farmers who say they're responding to consumers, who increasingly are demanding food that's organic, locally grown, or both.

Recent food scares - from last year's nationwide E. coli outbreak linked to California spinach to tainted Chinese imports - are raising public concerns about industrialized megafarms and the globalized food trade. Other issues include pollution from fuel needed to ship food long distances, genetically modified foods and bug-killing chemicals.

"It's amazing to me how, over the last four or five years, food issues have creeped into the general psyche," Murtha said. "There's kind of been a food awareness that's risen up, and that rise of consciousness is the tide we're riding."

Ben Wenk didn't work on his family's century-old 350-acre fruit farm in Aspers, Adams County, during high school, and mulled a music education degree.

"But when I stopped to think about it, I realized that music was more of a hobby, and farming was what I enjoyed the most and really wanted to do," he said. "I saw an opportunity to expand the business in a new direction."

Wenk, 23, became the seventh generation to work Three Springs Fruit Farm after graduating from Penn State last fall with a degree in agroecology, the science of sustainable farming. He added a half-acre plot for tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, squash and melons that he brings to Philadelphia farmers markets.

Wenk created a MySpace page for the farm, where weather conditions are posted and customers post thank-yous. He said the work requires business savvy and creative thinking to control costs and optimize sales, and Wenk is thinking about ways to expand.

"If I wanted to make a small fortune and retire at 55, I wouldn't have gone into agriculture. But I look at these beautiful rolling hills and think, this is my office," he said.

Such enthusiasm runs counter to the notion of farming as a dying vocation of dreary, thankless work.

"People always say, 'Oh, farming is a hard life,'" said Dawn Buzby of A.T. Buzby Farm, a 55-acre fruit and vegetable farm in Woodstown, N.J. "Sure there are hard parts - the weather, the hours - but doesn't every job have hard parts? Overall, it's a very satisfying, very rewarding career."

Buzby, who with her husband has been farming for 20 years, welcomes the fresh crop of people entering the farming field - including her 25-year-old son, a recent college graduate with an engineering degree who returned to farm full-time and also works the farmers markets.

"The new blood entering farming is a great trend that has really energized longtime farmers," she said. "There's a lot of enthusiasm out there."

Still, huge hurdles exist, from the cost of land to the threat of suburban sprawl.

U.S. Agriculture Department data paint a grim picture, showing that the average age of U.S. farmers has been increasing for decades and is currently 55 to 56, while the overall percentage of young farmers continues to fall.

People within the movement, however, say the numbers can be misleading.

"Are there young people who are going into farming? Yes, more and more," said Dennis Hall of the Center for Farm Transitions, a Pennsylvania Agriculture Department office providing technical assistance to new and established farmers. He said the landscape started to change about 3 1/2 years ago.

Nearly one-fourth of people who currently contact the center for information don't have farming backgrounds, Hall said. They range from college students to people leaving established careers, he said.

On the Net

Blooming Glen Farm: http://bloomingglenfarm.com

A.T. Buzby Farm: http://buzbyfarm.adamsarts.com

Three Springs Fruit Farm: http://www.myspace.com/threespringsfruitfarm

Center for Farm Transitions: http://www.iplantofarm.com

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Reader comments on this story - 2 total

Note: All views and opinions expressed in reader comments are solely those of the individual submitting the comment, and not those of the Pantagraph or its staff.

Heck yeah wrote on Aug 31, 2007 10:18 PM:

" Look at all the welfare they can collect and not have to answer for. Why not get their share? "

Pro Farm wrote on Aug 31, 2007 3:08 PM:

" Farming is not just a business it's a way of life. Raising children on a farm and being part of a family business is extra special and provides for family cohesiveness. Developers in the Blmgt/Nrml area seemed to be focused on paving over prime farm ground, some of the best in the world. More and more Blmgt/Nrml inhabitants show impatience and even disdain for the farmers and the necessary transport of equipment over the roads to get from one farm to the other. It would do alot of people good to take the time to educate themselves regarding farming and how it impacts the very food they need and buy. Alot of farmers are highly educated and run a very high tech business and are masters of any number of jobs relating to the farming business. They not only deserve our respect, they deserve our thank you's for providing crops, meats, produce, etc that we take for granted each and every day and what's it's taken to get from the point of planning on the farmer's part to our dinner tables both in cost and labor. "

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