Our Farm Story

The Heritage Farm

The name "The Heritage Farm" comes with a nod to Mother Nature's work, over the millenniums, which has evolved a full circle system that is sustainable.

Plants, animals, birds, beneficials, pests, and microbes which work together. Every output becomes an input for someone else.

That is where the "Heritage" portion of our name comes from. The heritage that has been bequeathed to us.

On our farm, we work to pay attention to how nature's setup has evolved. How can it be adapted to our farm.

Regenerative Farming

On The Heritage Farm, we work to rebuild sustainable systems that Mother Nature has developed; working with her instead of against her. Using science to learn more about how it all comes together. 

 Regenerative Farming (what a mouthful) is actually about putting in MORE than we take out while working toward no-till farming practices.

It started with - 

  • Organic Farming (no pesticides/chemicals), then to

  • Sustainable Farming (replace what you take out), and finally,

  • Regenerative Farming (putting more back in to nourish the whole).

 Nurturing the soil, creating micro-biomes to provide habitat & food for birds, butterflies, bees, beneficials, and microbes.

​Come join us for a visit to our small family farm and see how all that is translated into practice!  

It’s very important to include livestock on the farm.

They are part of the regenerative cycle, nature’s additional help.

The Team

  • Jim (James) Crawford

    HEAD GUY IN CHARGE

    He does it ALL. Soil building, habitats, construction, veggies, etc.

  • Amy Crawford

    FLOWER FARMER AND DESIGNER

    She does NOT do it all!

    But she does grow those Flowers & Foliages

meet Jim

All around Renaissance Man: i.e. can do just about anything needed done on the farm: a farmer, carpenter, welder, heavy equipment operator, and to earn an income, an Electrical Engineer specializing in Computer Science design.

Raised on a hog farm in the East Bay, he was responsible (as a teen) for managing 500 or so pigs and building pens, setting up water systems, feeding, and then processing them when immigrants wanted to buy the stock. It was a real hands-on education.

Along this path gardening early on became part of the lifestyle. That and eating organic. With ongoing scientific research much more is known now about how the industrial farming model is a fatal direction, it kills the life in the soil.

Oh yes, he’s makes wine & beer!

Meet Amy

At Santa Rosa Community College, a friend bringing her own floral design arrangement into a different class they shared, is responsible for a whole new direction in life Amy never considered before. The College has a floral design program (2 yr certificate) to introduce students to floral styles, various flowers & foliages, and the background needed to become a designer.

She fell in love with all the different flowers her instructors introduced her to. She was also appalled at the cost of the flowers.

Not the physical cost but the environmental cost; over 80% had been flown in from overseas. The "carbon cost" was huge and the chemicals used in the overseas markets were basically unregulated; to the detriment of the flower farm workers overseas and to the designers that used them here in the States.

Sorting through those issues she realized that here in Sonoma County we have the perfect growing environment for most flowers; a Mediterranean climate (mild winter, mild summers). If she focused on flowers that did not travel well she could provide sustainable grown organic flowers & foliages to the floral market designers. In addition, she could enjoy creating designs herself for clients and at her farm stand. A win-win; low carbon cost and chemical-free designs that were safe for anyone to use and to be around.

Tour our farm

What to see on the farm:

livestock - miniature milking cows, miniature draft horses, of course, chickens, flower gardens, high tunnels, greenhouses, bog filter mini-pond,  fruit orchards, hops, mini-vineyard, and a flower stand (out of an old pickup bed).

Start with a tour of the farm to get the lay of the land.

You will learn a bit about regenerative agriculture and how that works with our flower farming operation.
 Our farming processes using livestock helps in creating habitats for bees, birds, butterflies, and other beneficials.

Flowers are our reward from nature!

Lots of things go into a family farm:

planning, researching, visualizing, creating, and the day-to-day caring for all the parts. And YES, even some blood, sweat, and tears. But also, a heck of a lot of JOY and connection with the earth that really makes it worthwhile.

It's good for all of us to find some time to reconnect with nature. It's a kind of grounding to touch something real, not man-made.


Here are some pictures of what you would see on our farm as we have developed over the last few years. The fun is in seeing your work making a difference in the real world.