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Delta Farm sign Dungeness Organic Produce
Sequim, Washington

Nash Huber

Nash Huber and his “farm family” work 200 acres of rich organic “black gold” soil in the Dungeness River Delta. Famous for their carrots, called by fans “carrot candy” because of their exceptionally sweet flavor, Nash and his crew also provide PCC with chard, potatoes, broccoli, cauliflower, bok choi, spinach, cabbage, celery, beets and leeks.

Nash’s warnings about rapid residential development in the fertile Sequim Valley prompted PCC to create the PCC Farmland Fund in 1999 (now called PCC Farmland Trust. Donors to the Fund, an independent, non-profit land trust, rescued the 100-acre Delta Farm in 2000 and leased it to Nash for training of the next Nash Huber of Dungeness Organic Produce generation of organic farmers. “We have to be able to see past the next two or three years,” Nash says. “We have to focus on the land to preserve it for the young people.”

During his 35 years of farming the same landscape, Nash has stepped up to an activist role in his county’s growth management and protective zoning for agricultural resource lands. He initiated regular community meetings about the loss of farmland, and opened his farm to the public for a “Farm Day” in 1996. This event was so popular that now, as Western Washington Harvest Celebration Day, it is observed in twelve counties, attracting 20,000 visitors in 2003.

In 2002 Provender Alliance presented the Organic Carrot Award to “Nash Huber: A visionary, looking beyond seven generations, and a charismatic teacher of what is best for the land and all its beings, including us.”

See Dungeness Organic Produce for more information.

 


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