FarmHouse

Lancaster Farming

Welcome to FarmHouse, a Lancaster Farming podcast where the resilient women of agriculture come together to share their compelling stories and discover shared experiences. Join your hosts, Candice Wierzbowski and Stephanie Speicher, as they engage in insightful conversations with remarkable women spanning the entire agricultural landscape. From the barn and fields to the classrooms, boardrooms and halls of government, women are making a big difference in agriculture. Hear their stories on FarmHouse. Dive deep into the narratives that shape the industry, as FarmHouse brings you the voices and experiences of women in agriculture. Tune in to be inspired, informed, and connected as we celebrate the incredible stories of these trailblazing women on FarmHouse.

  1. 4 DAYS AGO

    Meet the 2026 PA Fair Queen With Olivia Morrissey

    This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we're speaking with Olivia Morrissey, the 2026 Pennsylvania Fair Queen. Morrissey, of the Lebanon Area Fair, was crowned state queen Jan. 24 during a competition with 64 other young women. "I was so honored to be chosen," Morrissey said. "There were a lot of qualified women there and it was great to meet all of them. It was definitely an honor." Morrissey didn't grow up farming, but she was involved with the Lebanon County 4-H Friends club, participating in a variety of projects and activities including photography and cooking. Her main project was sewing, which led her down her current path. Morrissey is studying fashion design and fiber at the Savannah College of Art and Design in Georgia. "I definitely wouldn't be interested in pursuing fashion design if I hadn't done 4-H and taken sewing," she said. Her minor in fibers was inspired by the national Make It With Wool contest. "There's a lot of misconceptions about wool," Morrissey said. "People think it's itchy, it's hot — and it can be. But there's also a glorious side of wool. It regulates temperature. You can hang it up if it gets dirty or if it smells bad and the smell will just dissipate on its own. It's so interesting and a lot of people don't know about that." Morrissey was also a member of the Little Dutchmen FFA at Annville-Cleona High School, where she served as her chapter's historian. Taking ag classes in high school inspired her to focus her royal reign on promoting agricultural education. "I want to be an advocate and teach people about what farmers do for us, and what agriculture as an industry means for our world," Morrissey said. While she is away in Georgia for part of her tenure, she will be home in Pennsylvania for the summer's busy fair season. Her goal is to visit all 65 fairs that were represented by a queen at the state contest. "I don't know if that's a reasonable number, but I would like to see all of (the contestants) again," Morrissey said. "It would be great to go to as many as I can."

    19 min
  2. 5 MAR

    Betting the Farm With Beth Hoffman

    This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we're speaking with Beth Hoffman, author of "Bet the Farm." Before coming to farming, Hoffman worked as a journalist covering food systems and agriculture. She's also worked as an Associate Professor for the University of San Francisco. When she and her husband got the opportunity to move to his family's cattle farm in Iowa and begin farming, she decided to take the plunge and begin working firsthand in the agricultural systems she'd spent years writing about. "I covered a lot of farms, I'd been on a lot of farms but I'd never actually done the farming myself," said Hoffman. "There's a real mythology around farming and homesteading and it's going to be, you know, really back to the land and getting your hand in the dirt and that kind of thing." As Hoffman and her husband settled into farming, they found themselves dealing the same big issue many farmers face: the challenging finances that come with working in agriculture. "The economics of farming was something that I didn't really know much about. And I learned. We learned very quickly even before we moved out, just kind of doing spreadsheets and looking at the kind of business side of it," Hoffman said. "It's very, very difficult to make a living on a farm no matter what you do, no matter kind of farming." Hoffman realized that financial challenges were a commonality among most farmers and was inspired to write a book about her journey into agriculture. "Bet the Farm" not only covers the economics of farming, it also tackles environmental and cultural aspects of farming in the U.S.

    30 min
  3. 26 FEB

    Shining a Light on 'Women's Work' With Audra Mulkern

    This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we're speaking with Audra Mulkern, the creator of "Women's Work," a documentary about the history of women in agriculture in the U.S. "Women's Work" chronicles women's roles and contributions to American agriculture starting with Indigenous farming practices and ending in the present day. Along the way, Mulkern explores the stories of women who farmed without recognition. "Women have always farmed, but their contributions and legacies have been buried by history's plow," Mulkern says in the film. The documentary dives into the stories of several female farmers and the challenges they've had to overcome. In one story, homesteader Marge Mullen moved to Alaska with her husband in 1947, chasing the promise of cheap land. After establishing their farm, her husband's health prevented him from working and Mullen took over as the sole farmer on their property. However, due to land ownership laws at the time, Mullen's name was never on the deed despite the fact she was performing all of the physical labor on the farm. "For so many years, women were relegated to 'wife,'" said Mulkern. "They were not honoring women with the title 'farmer.' And you know what I love about the word farmer is that it has no gender. The word is not gendered at all. But somehow we all think of men when we talk about the word farmer." Mullen's story is one of many reflecting women's journey to equality — both in regard to civil rights and in farming — and Mulkern is passionate about making sure these stories get told, from enslaved women to immigrant farmers bringing new ideas to American agriculture. "Everybody knows the story about the farmer passing his farm down to his son, but when do we ever hear about the grandmother, the mother and the daughter all farming together?" Mulkern said. "Those are beautiful stories and we need to hear them." "Women's Work" can be viewed on PBS.com.

    35 min
  4. 12 FEB

    Thousands of Bees and Unique Honey Flavors With Lauren Sattazahn

    This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we're speaking with Lauren Sattazahn, a commercial apiarist. Sattazahn and her husband John Tittle own Tittle Apiaries in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania. The apiary has about 2,000 hives and makes a variety of honey as well as beeswax products. Additionally, Tittle Apiaries offers pollination services for farmers. "When we have larger crops — when you're talking hundreds of acres — you can break it down to a science of how many hives you need per acre to really pollinate what you're trying to get," Sattazahn said. One of the apiary's biggest annual pollination jobs is taking hives to Maine to pollinate the wild blueberry fields. And the blueberry honey made from that pollination is one of the best sellers. "I feel like Maine is just the place for blueberry honey. It just comes out much better there," she said. In addition to the blueberry honey, Tittle Apiaries sells spring, summer and fall honeys, all made from flower pollination in Pennsylvania. "The bees are pollinating different things throughout each season, so that's what's going to give your variation in color and flavor," Sattazahn said. Sattazahn said one of her favorite parts of the job is offering honey tastings while selling at markets — and the reactions that come from tasting the different varieties. "They say 'honey is honey.' But once you get them to try the differences, they're blown away." Sattazahn said. With the business growing to thousands of hives, the apiary partners with landowners to serve as hive hosts throughout the year. "We've had a lot of people that we've kept bees on their land that have said that they've noticed a big difference in their home garden or their flower bed," Sattazahn said. "It's nice to know that it's benefiting both of us." The bees are overwintered in Georgia to keep the hives thriving during Pennsylvania's cold season. Tittle Apiaries sells honey wholesale, online, at an on-farm stand, and at a variety of farmers market and vendor events. "Our foundation of sales really lies on wholesale," Sattazahn said. "But I've noticed that being a part of the community, like our market sales, that seems to just help really building relationships the most."

    32 min
  5. 5 FEB

    From Birth to Butchering With Lulu Redder

    This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we spoke with Lulu Redder, the owner of Feral Woman Farm in North Bend, Washington. Feral Woman Farm is a pastured pig and chicken operation located within a historic farm park. The land is publicly owned and offers trails and play areas as well as a farmstead. This means the farm gets plenty of visitors, offering Redder an opportunity to interact with and educate the public on agriculture. "We get to work in this space which has a lot of history and a lot of public interaction, so it was kind of the perfect place for us to do a community-based farming operation, which I love," said Redder. Redder takes pride in the closed production loop she's created on the farm. It's important to her that all aspects of her animals' lives are managed on the property, from birth to slaughter. To keep everything on-site, she trained as a butcher and now processes her livestock on the farm. She also offers community butchery classes to those interested in following in her footsteps. "I did a lot of exploration and learning about butchery because I felt that I came to a point in my farming career where I was like, if I am going to raise animals for me, I really need to be comfortable with that whole process from start to finish to feel good about that," Redder said. Many of the people in her classes are women, which Redder appreciates given her own journey. "I have been a woman on a professional journey and some very typically male-dominated spaces," she said. "And I think it's important as a woman in ag to be pushing for our place at the table and to break the glass ceilings that are walling women in, in certain spaces."

    25 min
  6. 29 JAN

    A Love for All Plants and All-Purpose Sheep With Annie Hasz

    This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we spoke with Annie Hasz of Broadwing Farm. The Berks County, Pennsylvania, farm started in vegetable production but now focuses on grass-fed lamb for meat and pelts. Hasz also co-runs Rooted Home Herbalism, an annual eight-month course that teaches growing and using herbs. "We achieved our original dream and we grew loads of produce. We sold at farmers markets and through CSA and then more and more to restaurants," Hasz said. "But I had other interests developing in herbalism. So, as time moved on, things shifted." Hasz developed an interest in herbalism early in her farming journey. After being mentored by an herbalist from the Lehigh Valley, Hasz pursued clinical herbalism education in Virginia. And while the term herbalism is relatively new, Hasz said the practice goes back many years. "It's the use of, or partnering with, plants for some sort of health or enhancement of your life," Hasz said. "I really love to teach basic botany and just help people get really familiar with any plants they're going to encounter." While Broadwing Farm no longer grows produce for commercial sale, Hasz still grows vegetables along with herbs. "There's just this feeling for being with plants," Hasz said. "I think that's really the core of my whole interest in all these things is any plants, I'll be into it." Now, the main part of Broadwing Farm's business comes from sheep. Hasz raises both Texel sheep and East Friesian sheep to sell both meat and pelts. "We definitely wanted the meat to be centered, and that they would be great at thriving on grass," Hasz said. "And then just to have nice wool — to be that all-purpose animal."

    25 min
  7. 22 JAN

    Merging Farm Life and City Life With Lindsay Eshelman

    This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we spoke with Lindsay Eshelman of Plow Farms. Eshelman grew up on the Plowville, Pennsylvania, farm that specializes in Christmas trees, and while she still does work with the farm today, she spends much of her time living in New York City. "I'm kind of the leading voice in PR and marketing, and more importantly experience," Eshelman said. "My role is to bring the experience to the farm and to create this capsule of joy and Christmas that we have." One of the biggest ways Eshelman creates joy on the farm is its annual Newfoundland Day. Each year, hundreds of Newfoundland dogs come to Plow Farms to haul Christmas trees for customers. What started as an event with a few dogs and handful of attendees has turned into a massive event with people coming from out of state to spend the whole day surrounded by huge, fluffy dogs and Christmas trees. "I took a video of it and I put it online and we got a million views on this video, which blew my mind. It was a 15-second clip of a dog walking through the snow," Eshelman said. "The Newfoundland has gone from being our pet to basically being the face of the farm." While Eshelman runs her family farm's marketing, she also works in marketing outside the farm, including previous jobs with celebrities and global food companies. These experiences led her to a lot of travel, where she's gotten to see firsthand how farming works around the world. "Seeing how other countries are fostering agriculture in a modern way but also keeping traditions is what I love to take back to the farm," Eshelman said. "One hand meets another. As I get all this global experience it makes me love my farm even more." Growing up on a farm has benefited her by teaching her the value of hard work. But her time spent living in the city has shown her how important it is to get people to visit farms. "The more things we can do to get people to the farm and to experience this agro-entertainment I think is really exciting," Eshelman said. "I want to build that as part of Plow Farms' identity and narrative."

    28 min

About

Welcome to FarmHouse, a Lancaster Farming podcast where the resilient women of agriculture come together to share their compelling stories and discover shared experiences. Join your hosts, Candice Wierzbowski and Stephanie Speicher, as they engage in insightful conversations with remarkable women spanning the entire agricultural landscape. From the barn and fields to the classrooms, boardrooms and halls of government, women are making a big difference in agriculture. Hear their stories on FarmHouse. Dive deep into the narratives that shape the industry, as FarmHouse brings you the voices and experiences of women in agriculture. Tune in to be inspired, informed, and connected as we celebrate the incredible stories of these trailblazing women on FarmHouse.

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