Explore Inspiring Episodes
Farming on Purpose celebrates the stories, challenges,
and innovations shaping agriculture today.
Discover stories of resilience and innovation in agriculture. Each episode brings you insights into topics like entrepreneurship, sustainability, mental health, and family farming. Whether you’re navigating challenges or building a legacy, our conversations with farmers and industry leaders are here to guide and inspire.
#132: How Local Farmers Are Reaching Customers Beyond the Farmers Market
“Farmers markets are great — but they’re a narrow pipe between farmers and consumers.”
This episode of Farming on Purpose features a conversation with Dan Brunner, founder of Market Wagon, a platform designed to reconnect consumers with local food by solving one of agriculture’s most overlooked problems: distribution.
For decades, Dan had been fascinated by the way groceries move through the American food system. As someone with a background in software and logistics, he understood that the system wasn’t broken because farmers didn’t want to sell locally or because consumers didn’t want to buy local food. The challenge was the gap between them.
#131: Resource Allocation Through the Eras — What Agriculture’s Past Reveals About Our Future
“Every generation of farmers has asked the same question: What do we do with what we have?”
This solo episode of Farming on Purpose steps back from interviews and into history — not for nostalgia, but for perspective. Agriculture has never stood still. It has been shaped by expansion, collapse, innovation, and transition. And yet through every era, the core challenge has remained the same: how do we allocate our resources wisely enough to survive — and hopefully, to build something that lasts?
This episode explores the major eras that shaped American agriculture and what they reveal about the decisions we’re facing today — especially as the largest generational land transfer in U.S. history unfolds.
#130: Stop Hoping. Start Knowing: A New Standard for Farm Finances
“You don’t know what you don’t know — and that’s what keeps people up at night.”
This episode of Farming on Purpose features a candid, direct conversation with Jace Young, founder and CEO of Legacy Farmer. What began as a childhood inside a multi-million-dollar Kansas family farm ultimately became a front-row seat to financial collapse — and later, a mission to help producers avoid the same outcome.
Jace’s story is rooted in generational agriculture, hard lessons in pride and leadership, and a conviction that understanding your numbers isn’t optional — it’s foundational. This conversation moves beyond accounting and into something deeper: responsibility, structure, transition, and the kind of leadership that allows a farm to outlast the person running it.
#129: From One Cow to a Full-Time Farm: Building a First-Generation Farm with Intention
“You’re going to make mistakes — and then you’re going to learn from those mistakes.”
This episode of Farming on Purpose features a thoughtful, real-world conversation with Hayley Darnielle, the owner of Crooked Creek Farms in Montana. What began as a small, informal way to share farm life online has grown into a diversified, direct-to-consumer operation providing raw milk, pork, poultry, eggs, and more to local families.
Hayley’s story is rooted in first-generation farming, food freedom, and intentional growth — building a business that supports her family while staying grounded in responsibility, transparency, and hard-earned experience.
#128: Milking More Than Cows: Diversifying the Farm Through Storytelling, Farm Camp, and Purpose)
“You don’t have to have a perfect farm — you just have to open the gate.”
This episode of Farming on Purpose features a candid, energizing conversation with Megan Daluge, a fifth-generation Wisconsin dairy farmer, entrepreneur, and co-founder of Milk’n Mamas.
Alongside her sister Erin, Megan is proving that diversification doesn’t have to mean abandoning tradition. From launching farm camps and agritourism to running a women’s boutique and coaching other farmers on social media storytelling, Megan shares what it really looks like to build multiple income streams while keeping the dairy — and the family — at the center.
This episode pulls back the curtain on resilience, risk-taking, and what happens when farmers give themselves permission to evolve.
#126: Ranch Roots, Rhinestones & Real Life: Carrying Western Culture Through Music with Olivia Harms
“You don’t just clock out of agriculture — it’s a lifestyle.”
This episode of Farming on Purpose features a meaningful, wide-ranging conversation with Olivia Harms — a sixth-generation rancher, country-western artist, and self-employed musician balancing life on the ranch with life on the road.
#125: Raising More Than Livestock: Building a Multi-Generation Direct-to-Consumer Farm Business
“You can’t raise a cow that only has steaks on it — it doesn’t exist.”
This episode of Farming on Purpose features a powerful, honest conversation with Nola and Mikaela Schultz, a mother-in-law and daughter-in-law duo building Schultz Country Market alongside their multi-generation family farm.
From navigating processing challenges and pricing realities to marketing meat, raising kids, and preserving family relationships, this episode pulls back the curtain on what it really takes to build a direct-to-consumer business that supports both the farm and the family behind it.
#124: Marriage, Parenthood & Building a Business
“You can do anything you set your mind to. I say that all the time—and I say that as a working mom. There’s judgment, exhaustion, and chaos, but I’m building a legacy for my daughter. She doesn’t know any different—this is just life for her, and that’s what makes it worth it.”
— Penny DuSablon
Building a business is one thing. Building a marriage, a family, and a brand all at once is another.
In this episode of Farming on Purpose, I sat down with Cole and Penny DuSablon of Springpoint Company in Newton, Illinois — a husband-and-wife team who have built a thriving feed store, western boutique, and trailer dealership from the ground up.
# 122: How Agritourism Is Transforming Farming
“I didn’t want to spend my short years on this earth doing things that were insignificant.”
There are few conversations that capture the tension, grit, and innovation happening in agriculture today as honestly as this one. I sat down with Andrew Miller of Tulip Valley Farms, and we went deep into what it means to build a farm business that can withstand modern pressures—urban development, regulatory battles, community perception, and the weight of keeping farmland in production.
#120: Finding Where You Belong on the Farm or Ranch
Finding your place in agriculture isn’t always simple—or straightforward. In this special mashup episode of Farming on Purpose, we’ve pulled together stories from past guests who share how they discovered (and sometimes redefined) their role on the farm or ranch. From balancing family dynamics and business decisions, to stepping into unexpected responsibilities, to building side ventures that make staying on the land possible—these voices remind us there’s no one-size-fits-all job description in ag. Their journeys show the heart, grit, and creativity it takes to carve out a role that fits both your skills and your dreams.
#119: The First Acres: Honest Lessons from Beginning the Farm Journey
Starting a farm from the ground up isn’t easy—but it’s possible. In this episode, I pulled together stories from beginning farmers who are doing just that. Some bought back family ground. Others started with just a few acres, raising food for their own families and learning as they went. A few had help, and many didn’t. But every single one had to work through doubts, learn from failure, and find their own way forward. These are the stories of grit, family, long days, and the kind of deep belief it takes to build something that lasts. Whether you’re dreaming of your first 10 acres or trying to prove yourself in a family operation, I hope this episode reminds you—you’re not alone, and your story is worth building.
#118: Staying in the Game: The Story You're Telling Yourself This Season
” A topic we talk about on the podcast or have talked about several times is the stories that we tell ourselves and how much they matter and shape our daily lives.”
This summer, we’re shifting gears. No new guest interviews for a while. No solo deep dives. Instead, I’m pulling together the best insights from past episodes—nuggets of wisdom from the people who’ve shared their stories with us—to give you something meaningful to chew on while you’re feeding cows or folding laundry.
#117: Raising Kids, Cows, and Conversations: Paige Dulaney’s Real-Life Look at Ranching, Transition, and Family
”We're not six year olds anymore. We're not children anymore. We're adult children and we're trying to raise our families too and continue a legacy. So there has to be grace on both sides.”
Building a relationship that can handle these conversations when they need to happen is important. I enjoyed talking with Paige Dulaney for this episode of Farming on Purpose and hearing how she is putting this into practice in conversations with her son, her father in law, and her own family in different ways..
#116: The Real Roots of Regeneration
”We're trying to create awareness to critical issues in food production that are important to consumers.”
Farming and ranching come with a lot of responsibility—and even more moving parts. Most of us are juggling land, livestock, weather, business, and family, all at once. It’s a lot to carry, and there’s no one-size-fits-all path through it.
#115: Farm Accidents, Family, and Being Ready for the Unthinkable
“ I think the biggest thing is just starting that conversation and thinking about it and like coming up with a plan that works for you and your family, and that's gonna look different for everybody based on how old your kids are, how much you trust your kids.”
On today’s episode of the Farming on Purpose Podcast, I had the chance to talk with someone who’s seen both sides of the farm accident conversation—Katie Hammock. She’s not just a dairy farmer’s wife and mom of a toddler, she’s also an ER nurse at a level one trauma center in Virginia, where she sees agricultural injuries more often than any of us would like to imagine.
#114: Using What You’ve Got to Build the Life You Want
” Every little boy wants to be a cowboy when he grows up and so I think that's kind of kinda where it started.”
I’ve met a lot of folks in agriculture over the years. Some inherited the family operation. Others married into it. But every once in a while, I talk with someone who’s building it all from scratch. That’s what today’s conversation is about: grit, goats, and growing a ranch when no one hands you the reins.
Zak Copeland is a first-generation rancher running cattle and a goat grazing business out in Idaho. And I’ve got to tell you—his story hit home for me.
#113: From Backyard Birds to a Full Homestead: Raising Kids, Animals, and Purpose
” Just having the confidence and the know-how that, like if something were to happen like 2020 did we'd be good for a while. And I want other people to feel that way too.”
Back in 2020, my guest Emmaline Newton had no idea that a couple of ducks and a handful of chickens would spark a whole new way of life. Fast forward a few years, and her family has turned three wooded acres into a thriving homestead, raising their own meat, growing a big garden, and teaching their kids the value of hard work.
#112: A Family Legacy of Dairy and Determination
” No matter what, if you don't care for your animal, no matter what size of farm, if you don't care for it, it's not gonna produce milk. And if they don't produce milk, then we're out of a job.”
Farming is in your blood. That early morning routine, the smell of silage, the way the cows know you by your boots. It's not something you do—it's something you live. And if you're raising kids at the same time, you know the line between "work" and "life" is pretty much nonexistent.
#111: Building a Business That Works for Your Family and Your Farm
”I feel like it's my chance to tell my story because if I don't tell it, Netflix and Amazon and somebody else is gonna tell it for me. So it's my chance to tell the truth about how we do things here.”
Farming is more than a job—it’s a way of life. It’s early mornings, late nights, and everything in between. It’s raising kids in the middle of it all, teaching them lessons in hard work, responsibility, and the beauty of growing something from the ground up.
#110: Building a Stronger Farm Family
” That's why I always say things don't happen to you. They happen for you.”
Growing up in a farm family teaches you a lot—about hard work, responsibility, and what it means to build something that lasts. But it also shows you the struggles that can come with it—conflict, long hours, and the pressure to keep the family legacy alive.

