Local Kentucky farmers answer the question “why do you farm?” Videos by: Colleen Stewart and Regina Durkan VINEYARD- David Hall, owner of Black Oak Vineyard in Princeton, Ky. vineyard why i farm from Fleischaker-Greene Scholars on Vimeo. HONEYBEES- Dale Rose, owner of Rose Honey Bee Farm in Morgantown, Ky. bees from Fleischaker-Greene Scholars on Vimeo. [Read More]

Since 1934, the Fourqurean family has called the same 350 acres of farmland home.
Five generations of Fourqureans have lived and worked on Circle F Farms in Gracey, Ky., each facing their own unique trials and tribulations of raising beef cattle, show pigs and row crops.
Third generation farmer John Fourqurean, his son David and grandson John David discuss the challenges they face as they fight to keep the family farm alive.

By Regina Durkan/Farm to Fork Wes Berry is an English professor at Western Kentucky University who is moving away from big corporations for his food. But instead of just buying his food from local farmers, Berry has decided to become a farmer himself, albeit on a small scale. Within the last two years, he’s started [Read More]
By Celeste Laurent/Farm to Fork Kentucky is home to 38,000 beef farmers and more cattle than any other state east of the Mississippi River. Growing up on a family beef cattle farm, I know first-hand that Kentucky farmers play an integral part in producing American beef. This process is much more complex than people often [Read More]






