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*Local Organizations Partner to Support Beginning Farmers at Maple Bay Farm*



BELLAIRE — Michigan’s small farmers are facing challenges, putting the
future of small farms at risk. The farming population is aging, and family
succession is becoming rare. At the same time a growing number of new,
first-generation farmers are seeking livelihoods in farming.



To support promising beginning farmers, the Institute for Sustainable
Living, Art and Natural Design and the Grand Traverse Regional Land
Conservancy have partnered to create a farmer residency program at Maple
Bay Farm in Williamsburg.



Like an informal version of a medical residency, this farmer residency
program fills the gap between entry-level farm internship experience and
farm ownership, creating opportunities for young farmers to gain the
technical, managerial, and practical experience necessary to operate and
own an independent farm.



“Farming is an inherently risky business that historically has developed
over multiple generations. The farmer residency program is an opportunity
for our community to offer that type of 'inter-generational' support to
first-generation farmers,” said Marty Heller, ISLAND’s farmer residency
manager. Heller ultimately sees farmer residencies as a critical bridge to
attracting and placing young farmers in northwestern Michigan. ISLAND will
start accepting applications for the 2014 growing season this fall.



“Establishing a farmer residency at the Maple Bay Farm will allow the
Conservancy, a nationally-recognized leader in innovative farmland
preservation, to restore agricultural use to this historic farm while also
providing a valuable service to the region through an annual series of
public workshops which demonstrate best practices in sustainable farming,
land stewardship, and conservation in action” says Vic Lane, Conservancy
staffer managing the Maple Bay Farm.



The Farm is an 11-acre property on the west side of North US 31 owned by
the GTRLC. Surrounding the farm is Maple Bay Natural Area, a 450-acre
property owned by Grand Traverse County that straddles both sides of North
US 31. This property is known for its beautiful sunflowers, hiking trails,
and endangered plant species.



ISLAND and the GTRLC hope the farmer residency will attract motivated and
talented new farmers to the region while building the skill sets and
community connections needed to launch successful new agricultural
enterprises. The organizations are seeking support for the program and are
working together to evaluate future uses and improvements to the Maple Bay
Farm buildings. For more information, contact Amanda Kik at ISLAND (
[log in to unmask] or 231-622-5252) or Megan Olds at GTRLC (
[log in to unmask] or 231-929-7911).



*About the Grand Traverse Regional Land Conservancy*

Since 1991, the Grand Traverse Regional Land Conservancy has permanently
protected over 35,000 acres of land and 114 miles of shoreline in Grand
Traverse, Benzie, Antrim, Kalkaska and Manistee Counties. Their mission is
to protect significant natural, scenic, and farm lands, and to advance
stewardship now and for future generations. Find out more about the
Conservancy by visiting their website at www.gtrlc.org.



*About ISLAND*

The Institute for Sustainable Living, Art & Natural Design is a non-profit
arts and ecology center dedicated to connecting people with nature, art and
community. ISLAND helps people become native to place by:

•  supporting artists — visionaries, conceptual explorers and compelling
communicators — with dedicated time, space and resources to create new work;

• restoring the old and developing the new skills and traditions of
community self-reliance;

• creating and sharing a broad collection of tools for ecological living.


*Contact:*

Amanda Kik

231-622-5252

[log in to unmask]

Mary Brower
Food and Farm Coordinator
the Institute for Sustainable Living, Art & Natural Design (ISLAND)
231-622-5252 office, 231-459-8968 cell
www.ART*meets*EARTH.org <http://www.ARTmeetsEARTH.org>

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