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	<title>Sunset Hills Farm &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>Sunset Hills Farm &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>Why farmcations are a hot, new tourism trend</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/travel/why-farmcations-are-a-hot-new-tourism-trend/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jul 2012 09:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Travel & Outdoors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fairwinds Farm and Stables]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[farmcations]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Juniper Moon Farm]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sunset Hills Farm]]></category>
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			<p>When I was a child growing up on a small farm in Virginia’s rural<br />
Blue Ridge Mountains, it never occurred to me that wading through yellow<br />
 grass among cattle who watched with casual indifference or throwing<br />
newly split armfuls of firewood onto the back of Dad’s pickup each fall<br />
was anything but normal. My friends all grew up like this, among cattle<br />
and horses, even chickens and rabbits, and the pastures and woods of our<br />
 parents’ grazing lands were our playgrounds.</p>
<p>But as our society grows ever more urban and suburban, many people,<br />
even those who may have grown up on farms, are becoming increasingly<br />
alienated from rural landscapes. Now, thanks to the hospitality of<br />
several working-farm bed-and-breakfasts in the Mid-Atlantic, even city<br />
dwellers can experience a taste of life down on the farm, sometimes<br />
referred to as a “farmcation.”</p>
<p>Whether you just want to sit in a rocking chair on a long front porch<br />
 and watch sheep graze or you actually want to get down and dirty taking<br />
 care of horses and Alpacas, these farms provide plenty of opportunity<br />
for getting back to the land.</p>
<p>Juniper Moon Farm—also called Camp JMF—offers a variety of workshops<br />
throughout the year on an 11-acre sheep farm outside Charlottesville,<br />
VA. Among them is a weekend session on poultry keeping (Sept. 7-9),<br />
where participants learn how to care for chickens, ducks, or geese, and<br />
can purchase a coop in advance to take home two healthy, egg-laying<br />
hens—which means almost instant breakfast the next morning.</p>
<p>But one doesn’t have to be into chickens to enjoy a weekend at<br />
Juniper Moon (434-589-4455, fiberfarm.com), which offers accommodations<br />
for four in a bunkhouse.<br />Farm owner and shepherdess Susan Gibbs<br />
opened Juniper Moon three years ago after moving her herd of about 100<br />
mostly Cormo sheep (as well as a few Angora goats and Babydoll Southdown<br />
 sheep) from her previous farm on Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts. A<br />
former CBS network news producer, Gibbs gave up her career in a quest to<br />
 find out what she really wanted to do with her life. “I was in a<br />
bookstore one day and saw a book about raising sheep,” she says.<br />
“Something in my head just clicked.” Today, she also operates a<br />
successful yarn CSA (Community Supported Agriculture), selling mainly to<br />
 spinners and knitters, along with her bed-and-breakfast and farm<br />
workshops.</p>
<p>And while Gibbs offers a popular shepherding camp, where people can<br />
learn about everything from trimming hooves and catching sheep to fence<br />
building and veterinary skills, there are less intense offerings, too.</p>
<p>Among them is a cheese-making weekend (August 2-5 and August 23-26),<br />
where participants go through the process from start to finish,<br />
including milking dairy goats and cows and making 10 to 15 different<br />
cheeses that they can take home. Gibbs also offers a yarn-dyeing<br />
workshop (August 10-12), where guests not only learn how to hand-dye<br />
yarn but also leave the class with enough yarn to make a sweater. Gibbs<br />
says the farm’s most popular workshop is culinary camp (August 16-19).<br />
Gibbs, who attended culinary school, teaches participants of all skill<br />
levels basic techniques and how to cook without recipes. She tailors the<br />
 classes to each group and individual participant.</p>
<p>The weekend workshops range from $350-600 and generally include all<br />
meals and accommodations. And even for those who only want to be farmers<br />
 for a weekend (and are not interested in becoming shepherds or cheese<br />
makers), Camp JMF can be empowering, Gibbs says. She’s seen women in the<br />
 shepherding camp discover they can build a fence by themselves. “It’s<br />
really confidence building,” says Gibbs, “as most of our guests are<br />
women.”</p>
<p>Equine enthusiasts can try a different experience. Whether they are<br />
novices or skilled equestrians, they can spend a weekend on a working<br />
horse farm about an hour from Baltimore at Fairwinds Farm and Stables<br />
(410-658-8187, fairwindsstables.com) near North East, just off<br />
Interstate 95. Fairwinds, located on 52 acres in the heart of Maryland<br />
horse country, features a restored Victorian farmhouse bed-and-breakfast<br />
 that welcomes families with children as well as couples and singles.</p>
<p>Owners JoAnn and Ted Dawson purchased the farm 14 years ago and<br />
currently have 25 horses of their own, although they also accommodate<br />
guests traveling with horses. “Our niche is actually people who have<br />
never ridden before,” says JoAnn, noting that most of their patronage<br />
comes from people “looking for a farm experience.” Rooms start at $95 a<br />
night, with a $10 discount for those who bring their own horses.</p>
<p>The couple offers riding lessons in an indoor ring and also takes<br />
guests out on trails. Hayrides, carriage rides, and pony rides are<br />
available, too. A highlight of the hayride, especially for kids, is<br />
taking along homing pigeons, which are released during the ride. Guests<br />
can watch them fly back to the farmhouse.</p>
<p>If they’d like, visitors can also help gather eggs from the Dawsons’<br />
chickens and then enjoy those same eggs for breakfast, and they can go<br />
fishing at the farm pond. Fairwinds also recently began offering formal<br />
tea parties, especially popular with groups of women looking for a day<br />
retreat, where they serve sandwiches, desserts, and teas followed by a<br />
carriage ride.</p>
<p>“I grew up on a farm, and I believe everyone should have exposure to<br />
the lifestyle,” JoAnn says. “Sometimes people even help us clean the<br />
stalls. It opens a new world to them.”</p>
<p>She loves to watch her guests go through a transition on the trail<br />
rides. “Sometimes guests are initially terrified of the horses, but then<br />
 they relax,” she says. “It’s very laid-back and informal here, a way<br />
for people to get away from the stress of everyday life.”</p>
<p>Another type of farmcation is offered at Stargazer Bed and Breakfast<br />
at Sunset Hills Farm (724-586-2412, stargazerbedandbreakfast.com), north<br />
 of Pittsburgh. Proprietors David and Laurye Feller raise and breed<br />
show-quality Alpacas on the 70-acre property.</p>
<p>One of the farm’s most popular offerings is the opportunity to shadow<br />
 a farm manager for a day. Guests learn about the diets of Alpacas, how<br />
to care for them, halter-train them for a show, as well as basic<br />
veterinary skills. The workshop lasts four to five hours.</p>
<p>“We see a lot of parent-child teams coming for this,” says Brian<br />
Edward Leach, director of sales and marketing at Sunset Hills. The cost<br />
is $25 a person in addition to the cost of accommodations and breakfast,<br />
 which ranges from $79-125 a night.</p>
<p>At Sunset Hills, there is a choice of lodgings. In addition to a<br />
cabin, guests can stay in part of a two-story barn, where an upstairs<br />
windows overlooks the hills and valleys of Butler County, while another<br />
looks directly into the Alpaca barn, putting guests right next to the<br />
pack of 150 animals.</p>
<p>The owners are also known for being proponents of “full-circle<br />
farming,” meaning they look at ways to use their whole property to<br />
produce income. The Fellers do this by raising and selling animals<br />
(they’re among the largest Alpaca breeders in the United States),<br />
operating the B &#038; B, producing fleece, and running a retail store to<br />
 sell it.</p>
<p>The farm is hosting its first Fiber Fest June 23-24, offering classes<br />
 and seminars on raising Alpacas and showcasing fiber products from<br />
around the globe. The owners are hoping it will become an annual event.</p>

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<h3><strong>Getting There</strong></h3>
<p><strong>Juniper Moon Farm</strong> (1036 Venable Rd., Palmyra, VA) is<br />
 about a three-and-a-half-hour drive from Baltimore. Head south on I-95,<br />
 skirting D.C. on I-495 West. Merge back onto I-95 toward Richmond, and<br />
take the I-295 Beltway around Richmond to I-64 West toward<br />
Charlottesville. Get off at Exit 143, taking Route 208 toward Louisa.<br />
Take Rt. 659 for 4.5 miles, and make a right on Route 601. Travel about 4<br />
 miles. Juniper Moon is on the left.</p>
<p><strong>Fairwinds Farm and Stables</strong> (41 Tailwinds Ln., North<br />
East) is an hour northeast of Baltimore. Take I-95 North to Exit 100B,<br />
and take a left on Route 272. Follow 3.8 miles. The farm is on the<br />
right.</p>
<p><strong>Sunset Hills Farm </strong>(1120 Three Degree Rd., Butler,<br />
PA) is a five-hour drive from Baltimore. Take I-70 West toward<br />
Pittsburgh, merging onto I-76 at Breezewood. Take Exit 39 to Route 8<br />
North. Go 6.5 miles, and turn left onto Route 228. Go one mile and turn<br />
right onto Davis Road. After 1.5 miles, merge onto Glade Run Road.<br />
Travel two miles to Three Degree Road. The farm is on the left.</p>

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