Search Results (14)
USA
Milk from Mary Beth, an A2/A2 Jersey. She is pastured with her calf Henri, best friend Clara Bell (a miniature Jersey) and a couple of sheep. Little Lane Farm is not certified organic but does follow organic practices. Animals are pasture fed with some grain provided at milking. A closed milking machine system is used. Milk cost $4/half gallon. For more pricing info check out the website or call/text. This is a one-woman operation, so if you have any questions please text or call. But texting is preferred. See other places where you can find products from this farm.
Ferndale, Washington 98248
USA
Raw milk cheeses made with milk from their pastured, mixed-breed herd of Holsteins, Brown Swiss, Guernseys, Jerseys and Milking Shorthorns. Cheese varieties include farmstead (regular and sharp), gouda (plain, caraway, cumin, jalapeno, fine herbes, peppercorn, smoked), Mutschli (a recipe from the mountains of Switzerland). Farm store hours are Mon-Sat 10 am-6 pm. Milk and cheeses are available at the following locations: Ferndale (Farm Store), Bellingham (Terra Organica, Community Co-op, Rome Store, and both Barganica stores), Sumas (Bromley’s IGA), Mount Vernon (Skagit Valley Food Co-op, Rexville Grocery, and Big Lake Grocery), Bow (Slough Food), and Lynden (Green Barn). See other places where you can find products from this farm.
USA
Grassfed raw Jersey cow milk available via cowshares. Grassfed on native pasture plus some local alfalfa hay and dairy feed containing extra protein, vitamins, and minerals with each milking. For the cowshare to be feasible, there must be between 15-25 people buying shares. Share owners will pay the farmer 1/25th of the cow's purchase price up front, then 1/25th of her ongoing management costs (feed, milking labor, housing, pasture/hay) monthly and receive 1/25th of her production. Members are welcome to purchase more than one share to receive more milk. Ongoing costs will be lower if people become shareowners so that the farmer can get another cow. They plan to get a Guernsey, to increase the amount of A2 milk they are consuming, and at that point would switch to a herdshare rather than a cowshare so shareholder milk supply would be uninterrupted; they must sell at least 40 shares to justify that. Their goal is to have one cow of every breed and give school and public demonstrations on real milk production. Shareholders will need to provide containers for the milk. If enough people are interested the farmer will pool resources to order containers from the same place she got hers. Monthly management fee covers labor, materials, facilities and equipment to feed, care for and shelter the cow, collect the milk, put shareholder milk in their containers, and deliver it to a central location one day each week (day/location will depend on what makes the most sense for the most shareholders). See other places where you can find products from this farm.
Belleville, Kansas 66935
USA
Fresh Jersey milk