Ontario woman leaves office life behind to help save 115-year-old family farm - Action News
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Ontario woman leaves office life behind to help save 115-year-old family farm

When JennSchooleyworks in the orchard of her family farm,surrounded by dwarf fruit treesand bright, fragrant fields of lavender her mother's "field of dreams" she knows it's where she belongs.

Jenn Schooley worked for a children's mental health agency for 20 years

Melissa and Jenn Schooley are the fourth generation to run their family's 115-year-old farm in Ontario's Norfolk County. (Submitted by Jenn Schooley)

When JennSchooleyworks in the orchard of her family farm,surrounded by dwarf fruit treesand bright, fragrant fields of lavender her mother's "field of dreams" she knows it's where she belongs.

"You feel your generational roots when you're out in the middle of the orchard working land that your great-grandfather worked," she said.

"There's just something that pulls you in, and that drive alone is enough to keep me going for a long time."

After working for a children's mental health agency for 20 years, Schooley is stepping into her new career and passion as a farmer at Apple Hill Lavender Farm in Ontario's Norfolk County.

Her photos and videos on social media document her learnings cultivating a field,figuring out the irrigation system, anddealing with broken machinery.

It's a transition from office life into a world of "dirt, diesel, grease, and hydraulic oil."

Her sister Melissa handles the business side. They'll be thefourth generation in their family to lead the 115-year-old farm.

Jenn worked for 20 years at a children's mental health agency. She traded that in for a tractor, diesel, grease and family. (Submitted by Jenn Schooley)

With their parents getting older, Jenn decided to get behindthe wheel of the familytractor, sitting where her dad sat.

"COVID was one of those eye-openers, where it made me really see how important family was," Jenn said. "That's what matters in the end."

A learning curve

Melissa, a potter by trade, had jumped on the opportunity for studio space in the farm's barn in 2002. The sister said it would not have been "physically possible" for her to take care of the farm alone.

"It's such abeautiful piece of land that you just want to stay here and nurture it," she said. "To know that Jennifer was coming on board, it was such a tremendous sense of relief for me because it meant that we could move forward."

It'sbeen a steep learning curve, Jenn said, but she loves a challenge. Knowing her sister is by her side, and her dad attached to her hip,she hopes to soak up as much knowledge as she can.

In one video, Jennshows how to hook up an irrigation line to water an elderberry plant in the hot, dry weather.

She punches a hole through the line, and connects an emitter to a tube. The emitter gets inserted inside the line and the other end is driven into a slice of earth that peeks out from beneath the landscaping cloth.

Alarge staple keeps the line from shifting.

Part of that learning, the sisters say, is knowing the farm is an entity in itself a resilient force that's at the mercy of mother nature, an"unstoppable snowball" that's barrelling down a mountain.

"The farm is going to go ahead whether you come along with it or not," Melissa said.

The two are pairing up to ensure Apple Hill Lavender Farm stays in the family. (Submitted by Jenn Schooley)

Their father, who returned to his childhood home to run the farm in the late 1970s, was an apple grower with an uncanny gift for reading the orchard. He was also committed to exploring science and farming practices, and was one of the first Ontario farmers to grow dwarf fruit trees and run an integrated pest management program.

He met their mother working as aginseng and medicinal herb specialist for the Ministry of Agriculture and Food in a master's of science botany program. She daydreamed about planting lavender fields and running a boutique on the farm.

Jenn Schooley says she's been attached to her father's hip to learn the ropes of running the farm, which is an entity unto itself. (Submitted by Jenn Schooley)

Switching hands to a new generation isn't the easiest, the sisters said, especially when you've been responsible for life on the land for 45 years.

One "bone of contention," they said, was painting the barn purple.

Though it led to an animated discussion with their dad and a few grumbles white trimmings now pop from its stunning purple walls.

"Everybody who comes here, their jaws drop and that is one of the first things they say:'oh my god this place is beautiful," Melissa laughed.

This purple and white barn is one of the focal points of this Norfolk County farm. (Submitted by Jenn Schooley)

The most amazing thing, Melissa said, is the farm's constant evolution. She'll dig out photographsshowing trees that no longer stand and a scenery that looks unlike the one she looks out at now. Itgives her "goosebumps."

"The only thing we're guaranteed in this life is change."

They're diversifying the crops, adding elderberries and herbschamomile, arnica, andcalendula. The farm is currently open to the public, allowing people to wander the fields with "no barriers" and pack a lunch for a picnic.

The sisters say they want to educate people about the plants and wildlife on the farm byansweringquestions informally on the landabout plants or birds. The farm also holds workshops, such as ones on lavender distilling.

"We have more ideas than we know what to do with," Melissa said.

Melissa Schooley says the farm has taught her the value of opportunity, where she could work as a potter and her mother could see her lavender 'field of dreams' become a reality. (Submitted by Jenn Schooley)