logo PCC Farmland Trust, an independent, community-supported 501(c)(3) non-profit land trust working to secure and preserve threatened farmland in Washington State and move it into organic production.
Logo for PCC Farmland Trust, an independent, community-supported non-profit land trust working to secure and preserve threatened farmland in Washington State and move it into organic production.

The farms


Current farm project: Orting Valley Farm

Current Farm Project: Orting Valley Farm
Make the Orting Valley project our next saved farm: donate today.

Orting Valley Farm, a 100-acre former dairy farm, is PCC Farmland Trust's newest project, located in the southern end of the Puyallup Valley. The farm is bordered by the Puyallup River on the west, a tributary to the Carbon River on the east, and is separated by Orville Road. The same family ran a dairy operation on the property for 45 years and used the manure from the dairy operation to fertilize their hay fields. The property has prime agricultural soils as confirmed by WSU soil samples.

Up to five organic agricultural families could farm on the available parcels. Three of the parcels have a home and barn; one parcel has a mobile home; and the remaining parcel is vacant. The properties on both sides of the road are ideal for row crops, berries, and small animals, while the property on the west side of the road could also be used for a larger animal operation.

PCC Farmland Trust, in a collaborative partnership with Pierce County and the current owner, is working to find farmers interested in purchasing the property(ies) for organic farming. PCC Farmland Trust will hold the organic agricultural conservation easements on the property, while the purchase price of the farmers' parcels will be reduced with funds from the Washington State Wildlife and Recreation Program — Farmland Preservation, and Pierce County Conservation Futures, making the land more affordable for farmers. This project is an innovative approach to bridge the gap between the high cost of farmland, and affordability for farmers.

We invite you to help us make the Orting Valley project our next saved farm: make a contribution today. If you are a farmer and are interested in parcel information, please call the Farmland Trust at 206-547-9855.


Ames Creek Farm

The 178.5 Ames Creek Farm in Carnation was saved in 2006 by PCC Farmland Trust.

Three local, well known, and experienced families farm the Ames Creek Farm land organically: Andrew Stout and Wendy Munroe, of Full Circle Farm in Carnation, purchased 127.2 acres; Michaele Blakely, of Growing Things, is leasing, farming and living on 31.3 acres, and Fong Cha and Ma Thao are leasing and farming 20 acres for their Shong Chaos, or Children's Garden Farm, which is well known in the local Hmong immigrant community.


The Bennington Place

Joel Huesby and his turkey flock.
Joel Huesby and his turkey flock.

The Bennington Place, in the Walla Walla Valley, was purchased by the PCC Farmland Trust in 2003, and has since been leased and farmed by a nearby fourth generation farmer and became certified organic in early 2005. Joel and Cynthia Huesby (and their large extended family of parents and siblings) operate as Thundering Hooves, raising pastured, organic livestock and poultry in an open, natural and low-stress environment.

These 174 acres rise from the Oregon border southwest of Walla Walla to a rise looking east across the valley to the Blue Mountains. The land has ample water, an intermittent pond for migratory waterfowl and a well-kept house and outbuildings.


The Delta Farm

» Nash’s Delta farm tour report and video

The Delta Farm
A barn at the Delta Farm.

The Trust's first purchase was the Delta Farm in Sequim in 2001. The Delta Farm is an established floodplain property in the fertile Dungeness Delta of the Olympic Peninsula. The land drains into the Lower Dungeness River, home to six salmon species, and hosts the source of Meadowbrook Creek.

In 2002, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) purchased part of the Delta Farm's wetlands and a conservation easement on the rest of the farm.

Today, 74 of the 97-acre farm continues to be leased by longtime farmer, Nash Huber, and is operated as Nash's and also as Dungeness Organic Produce. Huber also is widely known and respected for his apprentice program that trains a new generation of farmers.


Sunfield Farm

In 2003 the Trust made a one-year $10,000 challenge grant to Sunfield, a Waldorf school community working to preserve an 83-acre farm south of Port Townsend, in Jefferson County, for organic farming and agricultural education. Sunfield finished raising its $15,000 match at a dinner/auction event on Western Washington Harvest Celebration weekend that October. The Trust then presented a check representing gifts from 186 donors, to great enthusiasm and joy.

 


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