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Gardenpalooza is co-hosted annually by Garden
Time, a Portland-based television show, and Fir Point Farms. This
one day garden festival brings 40 local nurseries to the farm to
offer greenhouse wisdom and plants to the public.
The
Harvest Festival
kicks off the first Saturday of each October when Fir Point Farms
hosts the annual Giant Pumpkin Weigh-Off for the Pacific Giant
Vegetable Growers. Continuing throughout the month, visitors can
enjoy a variety of autumn activities such as picking their own
pumpkins in the 15 acre pumpkin patch or touring the farm on a hay
ride.
Families are encouraged to visit Fir Point
Farms all summer long and a number of attractions offer something
for everybody – the greenhouse, the farm market, the trout pond, and
the ever popular tree-climbing pygmy goats to name a few.
Today, just feet away from where Eric Stritzke
ran his small vegetable stand, the farm market offers seasonal
produce, specialty foods and souvenirs. “As local produce becomes
available we sell it in the market. We buy from farmers in the area
and what we can’t get in Marion and Clackamas counties comes from
the Northwest,” said Jacoby.
Their emphasis on selling local products
definitely seems to attract people. Even while absorbed in the chaos
of a busy day Jacoby notices people’s enthusiasm. “Every time there
is a new crop people are ready for it. We put a sign out on the road
and I can almost hear tires screeching to a halt and turning into
the parking lot.”
Joining the “buy local” movement is more than
just a business tactic for Elliott and Jacoby. One of the most
important aspects of the farm is education and the partners hope
their efforts will instill a love of Oregon agriculture in the next
generation.
Every spring and fall hundreds of school tours
visit the farm to partake in the festivities while learning about
agriculture. Some of the schools do have an agriculture curriculum,
but many more are from urban areas and the students have never been
exposed to farming. At Fir Point Farms they learn about plant life
cycles, farm animals and, most importantly, where their food
actually comes from.
Elliott and Jacoby, like many Oregon farmers,
have a real concern about the future of agriculture in this state
with the average age of Oregon’s farmers rising higher each year.
“Who will take over Oregon agriculture if we don’t start teaching
our kids?” wondered Jacoby.
While the tourism and education efforts do
serve a crucial purpose in encouraging the public to support local
agriculture, the farm has begun to reflect the stress of all that
activity. Elliott and Jacoby source from local farmers while the
fields are planted in soil-enriching cover crops. “We want to
protect the farm and keep it viable,” says Jacoby. “That is the most
important thing to us.”
Over the years, Fir Point Farms has seen many
developments and changes. One constant throughout its history,
however, has kept the farm thriving as an agritourism destination
and an outdoor classroom for kids from all backgrounds – the people.
From the Stritzke family who envisioned the
agritourism possibilities to Elliott and Jacoby, “newbie farmers”
working to share their passion for Oregon agriculture with the
public. With the love and support that has carried this operation
since its inception, Fir Point Farms will continue to delight
visitors for years to come.
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