The story of our farm
Our family is proud to be third- and fourth-generation
caretakers of our piece of God's earth.
In 1921, Levi Oliver King, Ken's grandfather, purchased 150 acres of land near Yoder, Kansas. For the next
57 years, first Levi and then his son, Allen, farmed the land in a very conventional manner.
They raised crops and cattle. In 1978, Allen's son, Ken, took over the farm and continued the tradition of conventional
crop and dairy farming.
Challenging conventional thought: the beginning of
grass-based dairying
One day while loading manure by hand, Ken took
a break and
observed that his cows had four feet, yet were standing around,
while Ken, with only two feet, was doing all the work. He
realized that something must be wrong. Building some
electric fence, he opened the gate and turned the cows out to
pasture to harvest their own food and spread their own
manure. Both Ken and the cows were much happier.
Building upon this experience, he continued to plant grass,
build fence, and install water line to allow year-round
grazing. By 1991, the whole farm had been planted to grass
and Ken stopped using fertilizers and herbicides. The cows were
moved to a fresh paddock of grass every day. Because the cattle
were living in a stress-free environment, vaccinations and
wormers became unnecessary.
In 1993, Ken began seasonal dairying, calving in the spring
and drying the cows off in the fall. By 1996, the cows
were so adapted to grass that Ken completely stopped feeding
grain. He also began allowing the cows to raise their baby
calves on pasture until they were weaned.
During the transition from traditional-
to grass-based dairying, Ken
continued to sell Grade A milk to the dairy co-op.
When Ken made the switch to total grass with the dairy cows,
he needed lots of fences for the very tight rotational grazing
required. Being trained in mechanical engineering, he
built in his shop whatever was needed for any given project. When
he finally found what he wanted
in semi-permanent fencing, he helped re-engineer a superior product
line called the "EZ-End."
When the family started raising chickens, Ken went back to
the shop to engineer a customized plucker and scalder/dunker. Always striving to improve what
was built, he tested and rebuilt and retested until he had a
satisfactory product. After several requests from friends for processing equipment,
Ken added this to the manufacturing line.
The switch to direct-marketing
In 2001, after losing a quarter section of rented
land and
being forced to reduce the size of his dairy herd, Ken took a
step of faith and began retailing raw dairy products from the farm.
The first year, he made and sold mostly butter (pictured at left) until
the demand for raw, fluid milk increased. This complemented the
established market for fresh, pastured poultry, which the
children had been raising and selling during the summers for
eight years.
In 2004, son David figured out how to successfully freeze
milk, which allowed year-round sales, even though Ken only
milked six to eight months each year. Ken purchased a
walk-in freezer, and began expanding the variety of products
offered for sale. This included beef cuts, pork cuts, and
ice cream.
In 2005, son Daniel came home to join the farm
operation. He took over management of the poultry and pork
production, and added turkey and lamb. He also began
experimenting with cheese-making.
Ken and Daniel further
diversified their product offerings by marketing a neighbor's
organically-grown fresh produce. They also began retailing
eggs from several local grass-based producers.
Today, we continue to expand and diversify our product
lines. Our pledge to you is to produce the highest quality
food possible at a price that is affordable to you and
sustainable to us.
|