04/22/2026
Happy Earth Day! Today we’re highlighting AJ’s homestead, a working example of sustainability in motion, season after season 🌎
Each year, the Heiligman's prepare their land with intention. Vegetables like potatoes, carrots, onions, and beets anchor the garden, while fruit trees continue to mature, peaches, nectarines, cherries, apples, and pears. A growing flock of chickens rounds it out, providing fresh eggs for family and friends.
This isn’t hobby gardening. It’s food production at a household scale. Supplying even part of what a family consumes reduces dependence on long supply chains, stabilizes food costs, and builds resilience through what the land can actually produce locally and seasonally.
Site conditions matter. Located near a body of water, the property benefits from a moderated microclimate. Slightly warmer nights and a longer shoulder season improve crop viability and extend what can be grown successfully year to year.
But spring is never without risk 🌨
Late frost events remain one of the biggest threats to fruit production, especially during bud break. To protect the coming harvest, AJ covers trees to retain heat or mists with water during freezes - Where freezing water releases latent heat and helps shield delicate buds.
At its core, land management is rooted in respect. Respect for seasonal timing, environmental conditions, and for the capacity of Mother Nature to produce when she’s supported rather than pushed. When you work with those systems instead of against them, they tend to give back in measurable ways.
This Earth Week, we’re recognizing the people who live that mindset, not just in what they build, but in how they live 🌱