Tir Bluen

Tir Bluen Tir Bluen is an organically minded farm that has pasture raised chickens, hogs, and sheep as well as vegetables. cooperatively with agriculture production.

We seek to offer high quality, locally produced agricultural products that are affordable and healthy. TIr Bluen's Mission:
To explore and adapt agricultural techniques for the arid high plains allowing for the responsible continued use of the grass and farm land irrespective of climate while providing real economic opportunity and vitality for farms and ranches of all sizes in conjunction with pr

oviding local fresh food and farm outreach. Tir Bluen's Vision
To utilize the principles of regenerative agriculture and ecofarming to adapt techniques such as no-till farming, cover crops, mob and rotational grazing, cross cropping, pasture cropping, drip irrigation, rainwater harvesting, and land race breeding to establish strong robust farms and ranches on the high plains that produce high quality, locally grown food and operate irrespective of most climate and economic shifts. Tir Bluen's History:
Tir Bluen was started in 2013 by Justin Trammell. Justin was born and raised in the Panhandle spending most of his life in and around Canyon and Amarillo.He grew up on the family farm spending his childhood catching insects and reptiles, watching birds, and tending to cattle. He graduated from Canyon High School after which he attended West Texas A&M University where he got his degree in wildlife biology. While getting his degree Justin became fascinated with the wildlife agriculture conflict and went on to devote two years in graduate school exploring employment possibilities concerning that issue. He quickly discovered that the best way to pursue his interests and provide education as well as a living for his future family would be to start Tir Bluen, his 3 acre farm in 2013. While beginning his endeavors he married his beautiful wife, Whitney. Since 2011 Justin has began to explore what it might look like to be a sustainable agriculture operation on the high plains. The terms regenerative agriculture and ecofarming are relatively new terms however we at Tir Bluen feel that they are the philosophies and concepts that best describe our agriculture operation. Regenerative Agriculture is the practice of using agriculture (grazing of livestock, no-till farming, special plant varieties, ect) to restore the ecological function of a piece of land. Very often this mainly refers to grasslands however different methods can be used which combine the fore-mentioned practices. It seeks to bring out the lands full productive potential by maximizing soil health and using the ecosystems original patterns (Grazing systems modeled after bison, fire, ect.) An example of this is I use my meat birds (chickens) to increase organic matter in my soil while at the same time providing a good portion of their feed bill. They will be in 12 ft diameter huts that hold ~ 50 birds each. They will be moved daily and will not revisit the same plot within a 1 month period. I also plan to use my sheep to take care of some desiccated old world bluestem and any excessive cover crop or agriculture w**d growth. Ecofarming is eternal no-till, continuous live cover, and other best practices. It seeks to eliminate tillage as much as possible. This method also focuses on soil health and increasing the soil organic matter. I exercise this on my farm by eliminating tilling except for exactly where the rows lie. While I did not have live cover this winter I did put down hay which will mimic having live cover and also provide a boost to the soil organic matter. I will plant my vegetables during the season and as it winds down I will plant a cover crop mix with wheat and other plants that will grow during the winter. In conjunction to the no till I will also utilize a low flow drip system under the hay cover which should extremely limit the amount of water needed to make my vegetables productive. Both practices center around soil health. According to the NRCS tillage is the equivalent of an earthquake, hurricane, tornado and forest fire occurring simultaneously to the world of soil microbes. Simply stated tillage is bad for the soil. (http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/nrcs144p2_030943.pdf)

Healthy soil is the key to agriculture, if your soil is healthy microbes and invertebrates can provide nutrients for your plants and help keep pests numbers down which in turn gives you healthy plants which leads to healthier crops and healthier animals which leads to a reduction (or in many cases complete elimination) of pesticides, herbicides, fungicides, fertilizers, basically all chemicals. This in turn leads to a smaller economic input which gives the producer a larger profit margin which helps the producer have a more stable operation which leads to reasonable prices all in turn lead to a quality local food product on your table. CSA's (community supported agriculture) are a coop based system to sell locally produced agriculture products. CSA's are very popular in the midwest as well as the east and west coasts. CSA's work by patrons (or members) buying shares of whatever product they are interested in at the farm. This allows the patrons to know where and how their food is produced and gives them a connection to the land. This basically includes any agricultural product you can think of from produce and beef to eggs and honey. I strongly believe CSA's can provide a means to move back to small farm and ranch operations that produce food for the local area. I feel this will be extremely important in the panhandle as we begin to face the issues of climate change and dwindling aquifers. CSA's also tend to be more sustainable and Eco-friendly (and often Eco-enriching) than large agricultural operations.

05/31/2025

The Texas Governor has just signed SB 541 into law, massively expanding opportunities for small farmers and individuals to make and sell home-produced foods!

The new law, effective September 1, will allow Texans to sell almost any kind of food they make in their home kitchen directly to consumers within our state. This includes all kinds of temperature-sensitive foods, like cheesecakes, vegetarian casseroles, cut fruits and vegetables, frozen produce, and more. The only exceptions are meat, poultry, seafood, low-acid canned goods, THC/CBD products, raw milk products, and ices/frozen desserts.

The new law will also allow the sale of non-refrigerated homemade foods through third-party vendors for the first time. So those homemade baked goods, jams, pickles, dried spices and herbs, and more can be sold through local co-ops, niche grocers, and cafes!!

SB 541 also makes numerous other smaller positive changes.
đź’° It triples the annual sales cap to $150,000 and indexes it for inflation.
đź“‘ It allows cottage food producers to register with DSHS instead of putting their home address on the label.
🍪 It creates simple, common-sense standards for providing samples to potential customers without permits.
đź’Ż And it very explicitly clarifies that the local health departments cannot require permits or charge fees of cottage food producers.

This is the biggest expansion of the cottage food law we've ever had, and it puts Texas back at the forefront of the Food Freedom movement.

THANK YOU to Senator Lois Kolkhorst and Representative Lacey Hull for championing this important bill. We also want to recognize Kelley Masters at Homemade Texas for her tireless efforts in support of cottage food producers in our state.

This new law opens up significant opportunities for farmers and small food businesses across our state working to rebuild local food systems!

**** Got questions about the new law? We'll be offering a webinar on Sunday, June 29th! Sign up for email alerts on our website to stay informed and register for the event. https://farmandranchfreedom.org/ ****

One of the biggest perks of our new place? 34 acres of pasture for our animals to graze on! While 34 acres might not sou...
05/01/2025

One of the biggest perks of our new place? 34 acres of pasture for our animals to graze on! While 34 acres might not sound huge, with the right approach, it can be incredibly productive.

We’re putting rotational grazing into practice—a method that involves dividing the land into paddocks using hotwire and existing fences. By rotating our animals through these sections and allowing each paddock time to recover (based on the season, rainfall, and pasture type), we can prevent overgrazing and encourage rich, healthy forage growth.

This means healthier animals and ultimately better-quality, tastier meat.

It does take more hands-on management—like frequently checking which plants are being eaten and how fast—but it’s absolutely worth the effort. Done right, rotational grazing can make land far more productive than you'd expect!

04/26/2025

We got our pigs at our new place last week. It is good to get all of the animals we are keeping moved. I can use the sheep and pigs as ecological engineers and push this property even higher for more production.

It is a process, I don't have everything done yet as far as the pens I want to build, however it is good to be in the process itself.

Life is a process and now not only do I get to steward my animals in the way I have always wanted, I can also provide a home for my family while providing jobs and locally sourced, no additive, and the food safe protein people want.

RFK this week came out with a list of food dyes he is going to push to ban. It is a good start however the best way to know you are not getting any of those petroleum based additives in your food is to buy from local farmers and ranchers that process locally.

While technology can provide benefits and luxuries it is also prudent to pick out the things that still hold true from our grand and great-grand parents. Things like family, hard work, community, and now sourcing your food from more localized, if not at least nationalized sources.

Local food production is not easy so it is not the cheapest option, however by the time you factor in healthcare costs, the societal costs, and what it does to our community, local food is by far the best option.

Many local food producers also accept EBT and the corresponding programs as well as provide actual family supporting wages.

This way and life is not easy, not for the food producers and not even for the consumers, however, long term you have to decide on the values that define your life.

I look forward to providing my community with high quality protein, vegetables, canned goods, eggs, flour and more now and well into the future. We are building a lifestyle, not just a business.

04/17/2025

This may look like a very simple thing, unloading sheep onto a nice green pasture full of stuff for them to eat but for me this represents a decade of work.

We finally have a place with acreage where I can not only let my animals graze as they are intended, but I can also start rotationally grazing, using mixed herds of sheep, hogs, chickens, and at some point cattle.

34 acres is not the biggest plot, but if used right and intentionally it can produce a whole lot of happy animals and a whole lot of great meat.

Very often within the local food/producer and regenerative ag spheres operations are showcased in their prime. ONCE they have all their systems setup, once they have the land, once they have the animals. I know for myself it has often (and I think unintentionally from the producers at conferences and social media) lead to a great deal of angst and disappointment about how I had to run my operation to start with. To begin with I did not have the land needed, I did not(and still don't claim) know what I am doing, and I had very little idea about the animals I needed to make it in the harsh Panhandle climate.

I learned very hard lessons over the years, lost lots of animals and money, won and lost battles against regulatory agencies, opened a state inspected meat processing facility, and then 5 store fronts to boot.

The point is I am highly grateful to finally even get a shot at what I dreamed of since I was a small kid listening to stories about two sets of great grand parents and if you are a producer doing what you can with what you have keep at it.

It is not an easy road, you are going to fail more than you succeed most likely but the fruits are worth it. Getting to spend time with your family. Getting to provide you local community with good clean food. Getting to steward the land and provide the animals with the right environments, not some sterile cold life that so much commercial food production has become. It is all worth it.

I don't really know if there is any reversing the system as a whole as it is without starving people, but I think it is worth the pursuit and those of use that value clean food, community, hard work, and family can make a difference and provide a different option to those things that want it.

03/26/2025
02/09/2025

Address

15895 S. Dowell Road
Amarillo, TX
79119

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