Iott Seed Farms

Iott Seed Farms Iott Seed Farms is a 2,000-acre potato farm located in Kalkaska County in Northern Michigan. The farm has family farming roots that go back more than 100 years.

Iott Seed Farms is a 1,500-acre farm located in Kalkaska County in the Lower Peninsula of Michigan. We focus mainly on the production of seed potatoes while also growing wheat and rye as rotation and cover crops. We at Iott Seed Farms pride ourselves on producing a high quality product, being ethical in our relationships and having a positive influence on the people we deal with and the land that

we work. We first started farming in Monroe County, located in southeast Michigan, in the late 1800s or early 1900s. Brothers Ralph and Jim Iott farmed together in the same area after Ralph graduated from high school in 1953. The farm originally included several varieties of vegetables and canning tomatoes before adding chipping potatoes in the early ’60s. By the early ’70s, the type of land needed for reliable potato production was getting scarce in southern Michigan, so Ralph and Jim began scouting for potato land in northern Michigan. In 1974, they purchased the first 500 acres of what would eventually be Iott Seed Farms in Kalkaska. For several years, they – mostly Ralph – “commuted” 250 miles during planting and harvest season while Dennis (Ralph’s oldest son) and several friends and cousins stayed in Kalkaska to take care of the farm during the summer. The first several years of potato production in Kalkaska were for the Frito Lay chip plant in Allen Park. In 1978, Ralph and his family moved to Kalkaska and built the first seed potato storage on the farm. In 1981, Dennis moved to Kalkaska with his wife, Dawn, and joined the farm. Dennis’ younger brother Greg joined the farm in 1992. For several years after Ralph’s move north, the farm focused on chip varieties for seed, including Frito Lay seed, and processing potatoes for the two French fry plants in Michigan. In 1997, the last fry plant closed, which left the farm at a crossroads. The farm needed to add revenue or cut expenses in a serious way. That’s when the transition to becoming a full-time seed producer took place. In the fall of 1998, a new seed storage with 60,000 cwt (6 million pounds) of capacity was completed and filled with potatoes. Growth in seed volume followed, and the storage and land base was expanded with additions of 30,000 cwt in 2002, 2009 and 2013. Storage capacity now stands at 174,000 cwt with room to grow. With an eye on the future, Greg and Dennis recruited nephew Bryan Fischer in 2012. He and his wife Amber, along with their children Kaden and Abbey, moved to Kalkaska in August 2012. A third child, Lucas, joined the family in 2015. Bryan had many summers of experience on the farm prior to joining Iott Seed Farms full-time. He has been on a fast leadership track and will be a key contributor as the farm continues to grow.

05/28/2026

The Iott Seed Farms team wrapped up potato planting season Wednesday morning. In this video, Tom shows all the things the planter operator needs to monitor during each and every trip up and down the field. It seems pretty mellow when parked at the end of the field, but there is a lot going on when the planter is in action.

"Between Kalkaska and Antrim counties alone, more than 8,000 acres are used to grow millions and millions of pounds of p...
05/26/2026

"Between Kalkaska and Antrim counties alone, more than 8,000 acres are used to grow millions and millions of pounds of potatoes. That’s a healthy chunk of the roughly 50,000 acres dedicated to this versatile crop throughout the state."

Thanks to Traverse City Business News for spending the time to speak with us here at Iott Seed Farms along with several other farmers we know and work with across the region.

STORY: https://shorturl.at/3iH4c

The Michigan State University Mobile Irrigation Lab team stopped by Iott Seed Farms recently. The program evaluates cent...
05/21/2026

The Michigan State University Mobile Irrigation Lab team stopped by Iott Seed Farms recently. The program evaluates center-pivot systems and tests uniformity, pressure and flow rates, then — if necessary — offers a management plan to repair and/or upgrade the system.

Research assistant Riley Johnson and assistant professor Younsuk D**g, pictured with Bryan Fischer of Iott Seed Farms, set up cups every 10 feet for the length of the pivot, and then we ran the pivot over the line of cups. They documented the results. Sprinklers can wear out over time and disperse water unevenly or even apply off the target rate.

We believe in using water efficiently and effectively, so this is just another step in that process. Thanks to the MSU team for all the work they do to improve agriculture across the state of Michigan and beyond.

Each spring, Iott Seed Farms awards the Ralph Iott Hands-On Skilled Trades and Agricultural Careers Scholarship to a gra...
05/19/2026

Each spring, Iott Seed Farms awards the Ralph Iott Hands-On Skilled Trades and Agricultural Careers Scholarship to a graduating senior from a Northern Michigan high school who is planning to pursue education beyond high school in agriculture or the trades.

This year's recipient of the $1,500 scholarship is Kali Anderson of Kalkaska High School. Greg Iott of Iott Seed Farms awarded her the scholarship recently during the annual Kalkaska High School awards ceremony.

Kali plans to attend Northwestern Michigan College in the fall and plans to pursue a career in veterinary medicine. She hopes to someday own her own practice with a focus on horses and cows.

“I always jump at the opportunity to go to my friends’ houses who own horses, cows, donkeys, goats and much more,” she said. “I am also very active, and I feel that specializing in large animals would keep me outside and on the move.”

Congratulations to Kali. We wish you the best in your future pursuits and look forward to visiting your veterinary clinic someday!

05/15/2026

It takes about five minutes to reload the planter from a potato truck in the field. We sped it up so you would only need a minute to see it.

This video shows Randy reloading the planter, operated by Greg, with Manistee-variety potatoes that we recently planted in a field on Shippy Road.

05/14/2026

Yes, this drone is checking up on your work, Tom.

No, you probably don't want to throw a potato at it. Not that you'd hit it anyway. You're a farmer, not a pitcher.

(Also, the drone tops out at about 40 mph, which is faster than your fastball. You're not exactly Tater Skubal.)

The Iott Seed Farms team is about halfway done with planting season. We surpassed the 300-acre mark Tuesday before getti...
05/14/2026

The Iott Seed Farms team is about halfway done with planting season. We surpassed the 300-acre mark Tuesday before getting rained out of planting on Wednesday.

Here are shots of Greg, Randy and Tom from early this week while they were planting a field of Manistee-variety potatoes in a field on Shippy Road near Forest Area High School.

Iott Seed Farms works with Midwest Water Stewards and has voluntarily installed three monitoring wells on our farm to en...
05/12/2026

Iott Seed Farms works with Midwest Water Stewards and has voluntarily installed three monitoring wells on our farm to ensure that we are using water responsibly and are not having an adverse effect on our environment and our neighbors.

Farmers across the state of Michigan take their roles as stewards of our land and resources seriously and have done the same. There are about 250 monitoring wells in the Midwest Water Stewards network across Michigan and northern Indiana.

Iott Seed Farms takes its role as a steward of the land, water and other resources very seriously. For more on how we farm responsibly, please visit iottseed.com/how.

Planting season has arrived! The Iott Seed Farms team took to the field Monday to start the process of planting potatoes...
05/06/2026

Planting season has arrived! The Iott Seed Farms team took to the field Monday to start the process of planting potatoes.

We have averaged 45 acres a day so far and should have all 625 acres of nine different varieties of potatoes planted in about three weeks.

David Douches is the best in the business. We appreciate his hard work and successes in potato research and breeding.
05/05/2026

David Douches is the best in the business. We appreciate his hard work and successes in potato research and breeding.

There’s a surprising amount of science in a bag of potato chips. Researchers have spent decades developing chipping potatoes that can grow in all kinds of climates, avoid diseases and pests, sit in storage for months and still deliver a satisfying crunch.

Address

4637 Cool Road SE
Kalkaska, MI
49646

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