Matt Gordon

Valley Flora Farm - FULL FOR 2025

VALLEY FLORA FARM- FULL FOR 2025

  • 1 APPRENTICESHIP

  • FULL TIME (40 hours/week)

  • APPROX START/END DATES: May  - December 

  • $15/HR

  • LOCATION: Langlois  (Satellite Farm)

  • YEARS IN PRODUCTION: 18

  • PREVIOUS YEARS HOSTING:  1 

  • PRACTICES: Organic Practices (Not Certified), Mixed Power (Draft Powered, Mechanized/Tractor Farming), Low-Till

  • ACRES IN CULTIVATION: 6

  • Vegetables, Fruit, Culinary Herbs, Medicinal Herbs, Value-Added, Agrotourism

  • ON-FARM HOUSING? Possibly

  • VEHICLE REQUIRED? Yes

  • LANGUAGES SPOKEN: English, Spanish

  • Women-Owned/Operated

Valley Flora is a highly diversified fresh produce farm located 2 miles outside of the small town of Langlois (population 300) on the beautiful southern Oregon coast. The farm is deeply dedicated to ecological, climate-forward farming principles and practices, and we play a central role in our local food system in this rural corner of the state. Our crew is tight-knit and hard-working, and we strive to create a fun and supportive workplace for everyone here. 

https://www.valleyflorafarm.com/

@valley.flora

FARM OVERVIEW

Valley Flora Farm encompasses 90 acres in a beautiful, quiet river valley, 4 miles inland from the Pacific Ocean. Of that acreage, 40 acres are upland forest, 30 acres are in pasture, and the remaining 20 acres is rich river bottomland where we cultivate all of our row crops and orchard crops. The farm is nestled in a special microclimate where cool-weather crops thrive, but where we also have enough summer warmth to grow eggplant, sweet corn, peppers, and tomatoes outdoors - in spite of our proximity to the ocean. It’s a lovely climate to work and play in.

The farm is surrounded by natural beauty, with numerous coastal rivers running undammed from the coast range to the sea; uncrowded beaches; wild dunes and forests. The farm is 20 minutes from the picturesque coastal towns of Port Orford (to the south) and Bandon (to the north). We’re five miles from Floras Lake, an epicenter of kite and wind-surfing. There is also nearby mountain biking, surfing, hiking, fishing, and horseback riding. Floras Creek, which runs the entire length of the farm, offers numerous summertime swimming holes and wintertime salmon spawning grounds.

Valley Flora’s production is highly diversified, and so is our marketing. We distribute our food via four distinct sales channels: 

  • Community Supported Agriculture (CSA): Valley Flora operates a 140-member CSA from June through December during our main season, and a 70+ member winter CSA from January to May. We participate in the Double Up Food Bucks program to help break down barriers to fresh produce in our low income community.

  • Farmstand & U-Pick: We have a bustling onsite farmstand that’s open from May to December, and a busy strawberry and flower u-pick that’s open to the public from June through October.

  • Direct Sales: We harvest and pack orders for local stores, co-ops, and restaurants year-round.

  • Foodbanks: Thanks to an Oregon Foodbank grant and some long-standing local partnerships, we distribute produce to four local foodbanks and community fridges every week.

The farm adheres to all the standards, rules, and principles of organic production but are not third party certified. We practice reduced tillage, have an unbridled passion for cover crops and biodiversity, and we do everything we can to minimize our carbon footprint and avoid waste. We’re a mixed power farm, relying on a combo of tractor power, solar power, human power, and draft horse power (Jack and Lily are Zoë’s team of Belgian/Morgan draft horses who work in harness on the farm). Our farm infrastructure is powered by a 12kW solar array that sits on the roof of our barn and runs our greenhouses, walk-in coolers, irrigation pumps and more.

We typically have six folks on our crew during our main season (some part-time, some full-time), from May through December. In the winter, we work a scaled-back schedule, employing 3-4 employees who stay with us year round but reduce their hours in the winter months.

Zoë has been farming for over 20 years, first as a hired hand on farms in Massachusetts and California, then as the crew manager at Sauvie Island Organics near Portland. In 2008 she returned to her birthplace on Floras Creek to start her own farm business in collaboration with her mother (Betsy) and sister (Abby), who both grow produce on the same family land. Abby grows salad greens and manages the orchard. Betsy focuses primarily on greenhouse production of peak-of-summer crops (tomatoes, basil, zucchini). Zoë and her crew round out the rest of the production, from artichokes to potatoes to strawberries to broccoli (and much, much more). Together they market collectively as Valley Flora. After 18 years in business, the farm is thriving and ever-evolving

TRAINING AND EXPECTATIONS

Every person at Valley Flora is a crucial, invaluable part of our team. We all work hard, with the crew usually putting in 8-10 hours per day during our summer peak. Apprentices typically start in May and work full-time through October with us. By the end of October things ease up a bit and we sometimes reduce hours slightly for November and December. 

At Valley Flora, we “train-by-doing” and there is education built into every day, particularly when new employees are diving into a task for the first time. We always try to ensure that our crew members feel confident and capable before being set loose on a project. New employees spend a lot of time working alongside our seasoned crew to learn the ins and outs of everything we do. 

Because the farm’s production and marketing are so diverse, our daily to-do lists are ever-changing and multifaceted, which helps mix up the physical and mental demands of the job. That said, it is very physical work with certain intense seasonal peaks (for instance, harvesting the heavy storage crops of fall, or the constant weekly transplanting of spring/early summer). To help build strength and physical health, we train our employees not only in farming techniques, but also in proper body mechanics (we are fans of a set of body weight exercises called Foundation Training to keep our backs healthy and strong). 

Apprentices work as a member of the field crew on all manner of tasks that are part of operating a diversified produce farm:  

  • Daily harvest for our 140-member CSA, farmstand, and direct sale accounts. The farm grows over 100 different crops, each requiring its own technique, tools, and skill set for harvest. Valley Flora has a long-standing reputation for high quality produce and we strive to uphold that. We’re sticklers for quality and consistency, so Apprentices are taught standard bunch size, standard weight, and quality control for every single crop in ever-changing conditions. We need Apprentices to achieve these quality standards while moving as efficiently and quickly as possible. It’s a steep and challenging learning curve that requires keen attention to detail, awareness of pacing, fast and nimble hands, and a willingness to accept and integrate constructive feedback throughout the season. We are at core a lean commercial operation (not a hobby farm), and hustle is part of every single day.

  • Post-harvest handling: Apprentices are part of processing and packing the 100+ crops we harvest for four distinct sales channels, including CSA, farmstand, direct sales and foodbanks. Similar to harvest, the wash/packout process is distinct and unique for each crop and it changes with each season, as well as with daily weather conditions. Apprentices will learn post-harvest handling skills that rely on our dunk tank, wash table, sorting tables, dry curing room, and three climate-controlled walk-in coolers. You’ll learn to use various scales, different wash techniques, specific packout systems, and be trained in the selection of appropriate packaging materials, standards, and organization. Everyone receives annual food safety training.

  • Weekly Fieldwork: These tasks include transplanting, fertilizing, trellising, mowing, weed control, pest management, irrigation, and plant care. Apprentices will be trained in operating the equipment necessary to perform these tasks safely and efficiently, including mowers, weedeaters, wheel hoes, oscillating stirrup hoes, collinear hoes, Japanese hand weeders, drop spreader, flame weeder, pressure washer, and hand trucks. Other than our delivery van, all our farm vehicles have manual transmissions so Apprentices will learn to drive stick if they don’t already know how.

  • Weekly Delivery:  Apprentices will be trained to safely load, drive and complete our delivery route in our Sprinter van (weekly deliveries to wholesale customers and CSA pickup sites). 

  • U-Pick Management. Apprentices will be responsible for overseeing flower and strawberry u-pick operations one or two days/week. This includes setting up the u-pick stand, communicating and interacting with customers to orient them to the u-pick, answering questions, and being the public face of the farm.

  • Farmstand Management: The Apprentice might help manage our biweekly farmstand, including packing orders, setting up the farmstand display, selling produce, and tending the till. Our farmstand manager is a very public-facing role, involving lots of interaction with the public.

QUALIFICATIONS

Farming can be likened to an endurance sport that has some sprinting thrown into the mix (except our “sporting event” happens every day for a solid 8 months of the year). We try to cultivate physical and mental strength amongst our team so that we can “do hard things.” We are looking for someone who is up to this challenge and:

  • Is a hard worker who loves spending their day outside, regardless of the weather (and has significant previous outdoor physical work experience on their resume).

  • Knows how to hustle and optimize efficiency in their work.

  • Demonstrates keen attention to detail, excellent observation skills, and an awareness of pacing.

  • Is reliable, on-time, honest and kind.

  • Has strong communication and listening skills.

  • Has a good sense of humor and team spirit.

  • Can gracefully accept and integrate constructive feedback whenever it’s provided, without the ego getting in the way.

  • Is equally comfortable and productive working on a team or independently.

  • Is calm and adaptable in the face of the unexpected. 

  • Is not inclined to stir up human drama (plants and the weather provide drama enough on a small farm!).

We don’t require previous farming experience but a passion and deep curiosity about sustainable agriculture is very useful. For us, it’s more important that someone has the grit and good humor to learn new tasks and stick with it through the challenges of an entire season than it is to already know how to do the job (often folks who have previous farming experience have to relearn our systems anyway). 

Applicants should be in strong physical condition, capable of safely lifting 50 pounds, and able to squat, bend, lift, carry, and kneel for prolonged amounts of time over an 8-10 hour work day, five days a week, for the entirety of the season. Ability to drive a stick shift is VERY helpful, since our primary farm truck has a standard transmission.

We strive to be a warm, fun, welcoming workplace where our sense of team is paramount. To that end, it’s super important that new employees are team-oriented, but they also need to be able to work independently and productively on their own (there are plenty of tasks that crew members tackle solo throughout the week).

We are all constantly striving to improve ourselves, our efficiency and the farm’s productivity, so good problem-solving skills, innovative creativity, humility, and critical thinking are exciting traits in a Valley Flora applicant.

COMPENSATION / ACCOMMODATIONS

We work closely with our local Small Business Development Center, which offers a three month On-the-Job Training wage subsidy for new hires. Applicants who qualify for that program will start at $15/hour. Otherwise, new hires typically start at the local  minimum wage (currently $13.70/hour), with a wage reevaluation after the first month to assess the possibility of a performance-based raise. 

All employees have access to farm produce, and between June and December get a weekly CSA share from the farm, valued at $1000+/season. Employees also have unlimited access to “house” produce (seconds or grade B produce that doesn’t meet our sales standards), as well as gleaning opportunities throughout the season. For employees who complete the entire season we give out an end-of-year bonus, calculated based on the farm’s profitability and the number of hours worked. The farm will also reimburse half of an Apprentice’s RFC tuition if they complete the season.

Local housing options are somewhat limited, however we are well-networked in the community so it’s very possible that we could help a new employee find housing if on-farm housing is not available.

There is limited cell service at the farm, depending on the cell carrier. We have Wi-Fi that is available to everyone on the farm.  

EQUITY AND INCLUSION

Valley Flora is committed to open, non-violent communication and does not tolerate any form of bigotry, racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, or discrimination, ever.

Since the beginning, the farm has been a bilingual workplace. English and Spanish are both spoken everyday and Zoe makes a concerted effort to ensure that language never leaves anyone out of the loop. We are owned and managed by women, and we make our absolute best effort to give everyone on our team opportunities to take ownership of various aspects of the farm and to feel appreciated for their contribution to the farm. We try to assign tasks based on what people are excited and qualified to work on and never along gender-biased lines. We actively solicit input and feedback from the crew to make sure that the farm is being managed in a way that feels good, fair, inclusive and respectful. 

Being a small farm, our crew is very familial, which gives us a lot of opportunity to grow and learn together in wonderful ways. 

PAST APPRENTICE TESTIMONIALS

“Zoe worked alongside us and trained us on a number of things, which I really appreciated. The two other long-term farm crew members have been great in teaching/training me as well, but I know Zoe made an effort to be there with us as much as she could. That showed me that she cared about my learning and progression as a farmer, and she always made time to thoroughly answer any questions.” -2023

Zoë, Jen, Alexa, Sarah, Allen, Roberto, Abby, Bets.

Goodfoot Farm- FULL FOR 2025

GOODFOOT FARM-FULL FOR 2025

  • 1-2 APPRENTICESHIPS

  • FULL TIME (32-40 hours/week)

  • APPROX START/END DATES: Mid April-end of November

  • $18/HR

  • LOCATION: Kings Valley/Philomath  (Willamette Valley Chapter)

  • YEARS IN PRODUCTION: 13

  • PREVIOUS YEARS HOSTING:  1

  • PRACTICES: Biodynamic, Certified Organic 

  • ACRES IN CULTIVATION: 2 vegetable, 1.5 berries, 0.5 tree fruit, plus forage

  • Vegetable Production, Fruit, Nursery Stock

  • ON-FARM HOUSING? No 

  • VEHICLE REQUIRED? Yes

  • LANGUAGES SPOKEN: English 

  • Women-Owned/Operated

The farmer and farm philosophy is aligned with biodynamic agriculture and sociocracy. Goodfoot Farm’s goal is to implement an agricultural model that is ecologically sound, socially responsible, and economically viable.

www.goodfootfarm.com

@goodfootfarm

FARM OVERVIEW

Beth is the primary operator of Goodfoot Farm. We grow mixed vegetables year round; some tree fruit, mostly apples and asian pears; blueberries. Sales outlets include Farmers’ Market plus CSA that we run as a farm credit with market pickup. Certified Biodynamic and Organic. Some tractor cultivation; but the farm is mostly people powered. Animals are incorporated into the biodynamic farm organism; layer hens for egg production and a few pet sheep that mow the grass. A resident horse and neighboring beef cattle provide the foundation of our composting/fertility program. Farm crew (in addition to primary farmer) is 1-4 depending on time of year. Total farm crew hours (minus primary farmer) are about 5000 hours per year.

Rural community 30 minutes outside of college town; farm owners live on the farm (grown children are gone). Apprentices will have access to forest and river. There is some farming in the local community; lots of neighboring parcels are in forestry.

Beth, the primary farmer has been farming or on the land most of her life in some capacity. Her assorted educational background includes a graduate degree in Plant Pathology. The farm has been at market for 12 seasons.

TRAINING AND EXPECTATIONS

Apprentices will be trained in almost all aspects of the farm production system; limits would be in 4 wheel tractor use (training/use in 2 wheel tractors) and irrigation. Farm operations are conducted with a management system called holacracy which supports a high degree of autonomy and ownership.

Training is pretty comprehensive and rigorous as farmhands are expected to work with a great deal of independence and autonomy and are also expected to be able to delegate and coordinate others when needed to complete their roles/tasks. Training methods are well rounded with verbal instruction, modeling/demonstration, and written resources. Management system is based on holacratic principles. Check-ins and field walks happen regularly.

QUALIFICATIONS

No prior experience necessary, but we do need to understand the interest/commitment of potential applicants. Goodfoot has a desire to work with individuals who are seriously exploring farming as an occupation.  

Preferred qualities include a high attention to detail, ability to manage competing priorities, being self-organized, a strategic thinker and systems thinker, having a high degree of professionalism in work and person, excellent communication skills, and an interest in meeting people where they are at.

COMPENSATION / ACCOMMODATIONS

$18/hr.  

32 hours paid vacation for full season work; unlimited sick PTO. Apprentices will have access to free produce from the farm and an opportunity to trade at market. Most work gear is provided. There is a potential for partial reimbursement of RFC fees.

No on-farm housing is offered. Corvallis is a college town 30 minutes away; other communities are also about 20-30 minutes away. There are limited local, rural opportunities for housing.

EQUITY AND INCLUSION

We do not have traditional hierarchical labor systems; the farm operates on principles of sociocracy. We pay fair wages. 

PAST APPRENTICE TESTIMONIALS

“I appreciated how available and communicative the mentorship was, and the focus on comprehensive training to inspire confidence and autonomy. I also appreciated the conscious choices around how we practiced farming, and I understood that there was a solid reason for why we did everything the way we did--always with room for experimentation and new ideas.” - 2024

Beth Hoinacki

Lucky Crow Farm

Lucky Crow Farm

  • 2 APPRENTICESHIPS

  • FULL TIME (40  hours/week)

  • APPROX START/END DATES: April - October

  • $15-$18/HR

  • LOCATION: Monmouth  (Willamette Valley Chapter)

  • YEARS IN PRODUCTION: 7

  • PREVIOUS YEARS HOSTING:  2

  • PRACTICES: Dry-Farming, Mechanized/Tractor Farming, Organic Practices (Not Certified)

  • ACRES IN CULTIVATION: 3

  • Vegetable Production, Fruit, Culinary Herbs, Nursery, Cut Flowers

  • ON-FARM HOUSING? No 

  • VEHICLE REQUIRED? No, but reliable transportation to work is required

  • LANGUAGES SPOKEN: English

  • LGBTQIA2s+-Owned/Operated, Women-Owned/Operated

Eden’s mission is to feed her diverse, local community delicious, nutrient rich food seasonally. She is driven by her investment in environmental sustainability, social equity and economic profitability. As a young, queer, female farmer, she embraces her responsibility to set an example and to create a  working model for sustainable food production and thriving rural business within her hometown and beyond.

https://www.luckycrowfarm.com

https://www.facebook.com/luckycrowfarm 

@luckycrowfarm

FARM OVERVIEW

We grow mixed vegetables for a 75-member CSA, the Independence Farmers’ Market, local restaurant accounts and our online store. We do some of our bed prep at the urban farm manually, while our larger farm location utilizes tractor implements much more frequently. Though we are not certified organic, we employ natural farming methods and do not use synthetic chemicals or fertilizers. Our small farm crew is made up of Eden (owner/manager) and 2-3 other employees. 

Lucky Crow Farm operates a 1-acre urban farm in the heart of a small neighborhood in Monmouth, OR. Adjacent to the neighborhood (past the urban growth boundary) is the 60-acre, rural farm where our greenhouses, pack shed and cold storage is located. We spend the majority of our time alternating between these two locations.

Eden’s family has been farming in the Willamette Valley for six generations. She went to Scripps College in Claremont, California to pursue a degree in Sustainable Agriculture and Food Policy. After school she managed farmers’ markets in the Bay Area and worked on livestock/vegetable/tree farms in California and Washington. She started her own operation in 2017 on family land.

The farm in Monmouth is within a five-minute drive to downtown Monmouth and Downtown  Independence. They are both small towns with populations of about 10,000. There are plenty of outdoor activities available in the nearby area including hiking and kayaking on the Willamette River, which runs right through Independence. Monmouth houses Western Oregon University so there is a college town feel. A trolly was recently acquired to shuttle residents between both towns (for free!) The farm crew members live nearby and commute to the farm each day. 

TRAINING AND EXPECTATIONS

Apprentices will receive training/participate in: bed preparation, harvest, planting, wash/pack, farmers’ markets, CSA distribution, customer interaction, marketing, pest management, nutrient management, and propagation. Eden does most tractor/machinery work.

Full-time employees are expected to work 40 hour weeks from the beginning of April through the end of October. Spring days are generally shorter (with an average of 20-30 hours per week, depending on weather). Employees are not expected to work more than 40 hours in a week, even in the height of summer. Taking vacation days (unpaid) is permitted with advanced notice.  

As we switch tasks regularly, training takes place throughout the day as needed. Apprentices are regularly required to sit, kneel, stand, bend, climb and reach; regularly lift up to 50 pounds  without assistance; have the ability to work outside in all weather conditions, often for long durations; be capable of performing repetitive tasks with endurance. Reasonable accommodation can be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform the essential functions. Appropriate gear is required for all weather conditions. 

Beyond our scheduled training sessions, Apprentices will work one-on-one with either Eden or an experienced staff member every day. We are committed to teaching as we work and having impromptu training sessions when needed. We provide regular check-ins and can make time for meetings/questions if requested. 

QUALIFICATIONS 

Required:

• Detail oriented and fast learner 

• Self-motivated and able to streamline workflow 

• Ability to work efficiently alone or in a group 

• Experienced/licensed driver 

• Excellent interpersonal/communication skills and willingness to work with a diverse group of people 

• Ability to keep clear, handwritten and electronic records 

• Positive attitude in all types of weather 

• Commitment to work entire season (with potential for unpaid vacation time)

• Organized and thorough

• Ability to show up on time and ready to work

Preferred: 

• 1-3 years of prior farm work 

• Strong love of food, nutrition and healthy local economies 

• Manual transmission operation 

• Basic mechanics 

COMPENSATION / ACCOMMODATIONS

Hourly rate $15-$18, depending on experience.

Each employee receives a CSA share.

The farm does not offer Apprentice housing. As Monmouth is a college town there are plenty of seasonal, diverse housing options depending on the time of year. Past employees have lived in their own studio apartments, campus housing and in a house with roommates. 

EQUITY AND INCLUSION

Eden is queer-identifying farmer who strives to empower those who are not  historically/fairly represented in agriculture. Lucky Crow, first and foremost, is a safe and inclusive space for anyone interested in farm business and local food economies. We believe a more diverse and equitable food production system is imperative in our work towards a sustainable future.

PAST APPRENTICE TESTIMONIALS

“The work environment was comfortable, supportive and educational. Eden always took the time to come over and help any of us when we had questions, I don’t recall any time she didn’t drop what she was doing to give us advice and guidance” - 2024

Eden

Nella Mae's Farm- FULL FOR 2025

Nella Mae’s FarM- FULL FOR 2025

  • 1 APPRENTICESHIP

  • FULL TIME (30-40 hours/week)

  • APPROX START/END DATES: April - October

  • $17/HR

  • LOCATION: Cove  (Satellite Farm)

  • YEARS IN PRODUCTION: 12

  • PREVIOUS YEARS HOSTING:  2

  • PRACTICES: Low-till, Rotational Grazing, Winter Farming

  • ACRES IN CULTIVATION: 1/2 Vegetables, 15 Pasture

  • Vegetable Production,  Meat Production

  • ON-FARM HOUSING? No 

  • VEHICLE REQUIRED? Yes

  • LANGUAGES SPOKEN: English, Spanish

  • Women-Owned/Operated, BIPOC-Owned/Operated, LGBTQIA2s+-Owned/Operated

Nella Mae’s Farm is a high desert produce farm managed with low-till, regenerative, and holistic practices at the base of the Wallowa Mountains in northeast Oregon. Nella Mae’s philosophy is influenced primarily by Holistic Management, Lean Farming, and soil science. The farm’s purpose is to feed our community, steward soil, and enhance the well being of the land and those who tend it. 

www.nellamaesfarm.com 

@nellamaesfarm

FARM OVERVIEW

Nella Mae’s Farm is just outside the “city” of Cove, population 500. Cove is on the east side of the Grande Ronde Valley, population 26,000, one of the largest round valleys in the world. While this is technically high desert, the snow melt, rivers and a high water table make this place rich for agriculture. We also face a short spring, extreme temperature swings in the summer, and increasingly variable weather. We are learning to adapt every year.

Most of the farms in the valley are hundreds or thousands of acres and grow grass, grains and sunflowers for seed, alfalfa, mint, and sugar beets. There is a healthy number of small-scale farms growing meat, produce, and nursery crops, and our small group of small farms is mutually supportive and highly collaborative. We have a huge amount of support locally large and small, as well as fellow business owners, customers, and neighbors as we have grown the farm. We look forward to enhancing an Apprentice’s experience at the farm through sharing experiences with her own mentors and farmer friends.

The farm also raises a few beef for market with a neighbor. 

Produce sells at the on-farm farmstand, the La Grande Farmers Market, several retail outlets, one CSA, the local and regional food banks, and restaurants in two counties. 

The farm crew is small and tight-knit. We have a friendly, fun crew and focus on collaboration, teamwork, improving systems together, and eating well. Nella Mae cooks lunch for the crew every harvest day (Tuesday and Friday.)

2025 will be the 12th season of Nella Mae’s Farm, but she grew up on her family’s farm and started selling at the La Grande Farmers Market when she was 10 years old. However, due to the difficulty of farming, she was encouraged to leave agriculture behind and go to college. Her return to agriculture was a surprise to everyone, and was made possible by the local food movement of the 2000’s.

2025 adds Samirah Miller as a farming partner at Nella Mae’s Farm. Samirah is a past RFC Apprentice who just completed her masters in Regenerative Agriculture. She also has a masters in nutrition. 

Samirah also hails from the desert west, Arizona, where she worked on several farms before coming to eastern Oregon. Samirah’s holistic approach to health and sustainability is an inspiration to those around her, as she strives to make the world a healthier, more sustainable place. She has focused on adding winter farming and flowers into the mix at Nella Mae’s Farm.

TRAINING AND EXPECTATION

Skills taught at the farm include seed starting, transplanting, direct seeding, harvesting, produce processing, marketing, use of equipment, farm business management skills, sales, and customer service. 

An Apprentice at the farm will have the opportunity to go as deep as they are interested in learning marketing, business, and staff management as well as the best practices on propagation, harvest, food safety, soil care, irrigation, plumbing, light construction, and the importance of developing a farm network.

Apprentice will generally work 6 hour days 4-5 days per week.

                                                                                                                                               Time off is flexible with one or two weeks’ notice.

Heavy exertion is typical with farm work. Most work is done by hand. Carrying boxes of produce, tough work such as post pounding or broad forking, and working in hot and cold conditions is typical.

Training is integrated into work. Teaching and farming are linked in every activity on the farm. We take hour-long lunches to discuss finances, bookkeeping, no-till practices, etc. Every day at lunch is our check-in time. The rest of the training happens each morning as we plan out the day together, walk the fields, and review best practices. Discussion happens in real time while we work together. Nella Mae works side by side with others on the farm for 80-90 percent of the day and talks in depth about ag practices, books, why we do things the way we do them, and how we got here. 

Nella Mae and Samirah love to discuss big ideas and are very involved in the policy and politics of agriculture, social justice, natural resources, and rural places. 

Fingers crossed that Apprentices will find us funny because we love to laugh while we work. :)

We always put hoes down to visit with neighbors who stop by and learn from elders in the neighborhood.

We also host outdoor schools and class visits several times per year at the farm, so we have the opportunity to teach and learn from kiddos.

QUALIFICATIONS

We are looking for a hard-working, self-motivated person who is able to communicate in a timely, and direct manner. Most important is someone who is curious, thinks deeply, asks questions, problem solves, and helps the farm improve by giving feedback and utilizing their human creativity. An Apprentice must be able to work quickly and deftly with their hands. 

We are happy to host Apprentices with no gardening or ag experience. We are looking for an Apprentice who is interested in plants and has some demonstrable experience doing physical labor. 

Attention to detail and adherence to our food safety procedures is critical. Applicants should be ready for physical work and to lift 30 lbs regularly. They should also be able to work outside in all weather conditions from rain to heat. We invite a person of any skill level to apply for as long as they are excited to learn about farming and work outside. 

Due to our very rural location, the Apprentice should have their own reliable transportation.  

An in-person visit is not required before a final placement decision is made but candidates may visit if they like. 

COMPENSATION / ACCOMMODATIONS

Compensation is $17/hour plus reimbursement of RFC tuition if/when the season is completed. This additional benefit works out to an equivalent of about $18/hour. Apprentices get all the produce they can eat and preserve, use of farm kitchen for food/preservation projects, a very flexible schedule for time off, hot lunch on harvest days, and use of farm library. 

No on-farm housing is available, but the nearest town, La Grande, is a college town (Eastern Oregon University.) Summer rentals are available. Rentals in Union, Oregon, 10 miles away, may also be available. 

EQUITY AND INCLUSION

Equity, inclusion, anti-racism, and feminism are guiding principles in how Nella Mae and Samirah live their lives,  run the farm, and operate the business. Understanding their own privilege, checking it, and ensuring that they are sharing knowledge and resources with new and beginning farmers is paramount to what they do.  

PAST APPRENTICE TESTIMONIALS

Samirah says: ” Working with Nella Mae at Nella Mae's Farm has been an inspiring and transformative experience. Nella’s commitment to innovative farming practices and community engagement has profoundly shaped my approach to sustainable agriculture. This year, I am thrilled to continue as a farming partner, co-leading collaborative projects that focus on food security, community education, flowers and regenerative practices. Nella’s mentorship and dedication to fostering growth both in the field and within people have been invaluable, and I look forward to building on this foundation in the coming season!”  -2024

Nella Mae

Samirah

Peachwood Orchard - FULL FOR 2025

PEACHWOOD ORCHARD- FULL FOR 2025

  • 2 APPRENTICESHIPS

  • FULL TIME (38 hours/week)

  • APPROX START/END DATES: May - September

  • $15.50/HR

  • LOCATION: Hood River  (Portland Chapter)

  • YEARS IN PRODUCTION: 8

  • PREVIOUS YEARS HOSTING:  3

  • PRACTICES: Certified Organic

  • ACRES IN CULTIVATION: 3.5

  • Fruit, Vegetables, Seed

  • ON-FARM HOUSING? Yes

  • VEHICLE REQUIRED? Yes

  • LANGUAGES SPOKEN: English, Spanish

  • BIPOC-Owned/Operated, Women-Owned/Operated


Our organic farming practices are guided by sustainable land stewardship and food sovereignty. We welcome a diverse community to connect with the land we farm. We’re committed to training a future generation of farmers and making these skills accessible to BIPOC and queer community. We envision a fair food system in which the land and people are cared for- an orchard that sustains life and a diverse community. We cultivate a supportive space where BIPOC folks can connect with the land in a meaningful way that feels fair and reciprocal.

https://www.hoodriverpeaches.com/

@peachwood_orchard

FARM OVERVIEW

Peachwood Orchards is an organic peach orchard located in traditional lands of Wasco, Wishram, and Chinook- known as Hood River, Oregon. With a stunning view of Mt. Hood along a small creek are 3.5 acres of peaches and our home. We’re about 5 miles from downtown Hood River and a short drive to many hikes, swimming holes, and waterfalls. Our house is on the property as well as a large shed for tools, cold storage, a shop for woodworking and repairs, and a small greenhouse/shed.

We have been certified organic through Oregon Tilth for the past 8 years. There are about 300 peach trees on the property along with 20 blueberry bushes, Tayberries, plums, and several 25x15ft garden plots. 

We sell at farmer’s markets, through a local farmer’s cooperative, restaurants, grocery stores, to CSAs, and breweries- even had a beer named after Alma made with our peaches! We particularly enjoy being part of the Portland BIPOC market and welcoming other people onto the farm to learn. Even though our focus is largely in growing peaches there are opportunities for learning about irrigation, land restoration, and growing seed for saving heirloom varieties. We make donations to several food banks, and many other groups/organizations. We are in community with other BIPOC farmers in our region and will be taking part in a BIPOC-only vendor farmer’s market in Portland, Oregon. Additionally we are growing flowers and crops for a local small market in Odell. We bring traditional foods to that market along with our peaches. 

David and Alma live and work on the farm with their sweet dog Whoopie. Alma and Whoopie dog work in the orchard full-time in the summer, while Dave works in the local hospital full-time. Alma is first-generation Xicana, her passion for agriculture launched her into orcharding for the past 8 years. As a child, she watched her grandfather work in his milpa in Zacatecas, Mexico following through the fields and always asking questions– wanting to emulate him. We like to host family and friends in our house in the summer and Alma loves to cook traditional foods and share meals whenever there’s a chance. Alma is involved in social and environmental justice organizations in the community and is on the board of a food access non-profit. Typically we host between 2-4 volunteers through WWOOF and other organizations. The orchard is largely run by us, we may have support from 1-2 part time employees during the busy parts of the season. 

TRAINING AND EXPECTATIONS

We expect an Apprentice to be respectful of the land and community we work with. We expect you to be on time and keep your commitments. Work week will be an average of 38 hours, 5 days a week, including Saturday. Expect to work between 8-10 hours during the peak time in June, and August with other times of the season to average between 6-8 hour work days in July. We ask that you be available to help with Saturday farmer’s markets each week during August and September. We prefer an applicant who has availability from June to September. 

June through September will have plenty of opportunities to thin fruits and learn how to harvest peaches at peak ripeness. There are opportunities to learn about accounting, record keeping, and account management. Alma typically cans, freezes, ferments, dehydrates peaches and is happy to share her knowledge as time permits. 

June-July: Thinning fruits, management of orchard floor. This is a time to learn irrigation repair and maintenance for the rest of the seasons. July will be focused on gardens and seed-saving projects, as the peaches ripen. We work on the small gardens and experiment with no-till management. 

August-September: Peach harvest, packing, record-keeping, and managing sales/accounts. Preparing for market and other sales. Preparing and running farmer’s markets. Processing harvest. 

Optional: Restoration projects along the creek that runs through our property include: mitigation of opportunistic plant species, establishing pollinator habitat, and planting of native shrubs. 

We intend to work alongside Apprentices, there will be specific demonstration and training at the beginning and we will make ample time to be available and work together to allow for questions to come naturally. Independence of work will be gained with experience and based on the comfort developed with each task. The extent of supervision will depend on experience and on the nature that we’ll often be working together.

QUALIFICATIONS

Some experience working in agriculture is preferred. We’re looking for people who are interested in and/or already engaged with orchard work. Good work ethic is important for long days of work as well as ability to work well in a team, and clearly communicate. We ask that you are open to working with people of diverse races, gender, sexual orientations, and cultures. A phone call and visit to the farm are required prior to placement, we are open to doing a Zoom tour in case you’re not able to physically visit. Some flexibility on dates if communicated clearly and early. Ability to lift 50 lbs and be on your feet for hours at a time.

COMPENSATION & ACCOMMODATIONS

Our starting wage is $15.50 per hour and will depend on experience. 

Housing is in a ¾ size school bus parked on the farm with light and heat provided, next to an outdoor communal kitchen and shower. There is an enclosed bathroom with toilet and potable water. Kitchen has a propane stove, hot water kettle, sink, food storage, and small fridge. 

We will have a second housing option available this season, a tiny house that is also on the property. 

There is cell service and access to WIFI and our laundry/dryer. A list of basic food staples will be provided and resupplied throughout the season as well as access to food grown in the garden and all the peaches you can eat. No smoking, please be responsible about drinking. Visitors may be welcome but please check with us and others living on the farm beforehand. We love to share meals but are limited to our availability/schedules. Room and Board fee is $400 per month for the bus. The tiny house is $700 per month, with a $125 deposit.

EQUITY & INCLUSION

We encourage applicants from all backgrounds and aim to nurture an environment of respect and dignity for all individuals. Our farm welcomes aspiring farmers of all ages, races, genders, sexual orientations, religions, and cultural backgrounds.

PAST APPRENTICE TESTIMONIALS

“Alma met with us to start nearly every day, we stretched as a group and talked about our plans for the day.  I really appreciated this.  She was also really calm and kind.  She took time to walk around the farm with us and look at things and explain things.  She also made a real effort to change the tasks we were working on multiple times most days so we could use our bodies differently, and was really great about our schedules being flexible and not too demanding.“ - 2022

“I really appreciate how Alma is so passionate about teaching and really wants us to feel confident. She leaves lots of room for questions and is always open to hearing feedback. She gives both really positive and constructive feedback which helped me feel like I was doing a good job this season. She trusted me to handle the farmers market and make almost all of the deliveries throughout our season. Alma and I definitely made decisions together in terms of how our work week would flow and which tasks we'd each do. She really valued my opinion and that felt really good.” - 2023

Alma Gaeta

Alma Gaeta