Fat Toaster Farm

Fat Toaster Farm Featuring Jacob Sheep wool products and cheeky hand forged items. JSBA.org lifetime members. "Way out in the country, but not way out in right field."

All items are produced at our small general farm in the heart of Michigan's orchard country with attention to sustainability, animal ethics, and environment care. Fat Toaster Farm and Forge is located on the orchard ridge of Kent City, Michigan, just one mile north of the tiny village of Casnovia and only 25 minutes north of the Grand Rapids. We make a good-faith effort to raise food for our table

in an ethical and mindful way. We enjoy fiber arts, animal husbandry, forging steel, meals, farming history, social justice, and opportunities for education with our community. All of this comes alongside our ongoing commitments to our two children, our careers, and our partners and friends.

Friends, we are proud to be environmentally verified with the Michigan Agriculture Environmental Assurance Program (MAEA...
07/15/2023

Friends, we are proud to be environmentally verified with the Michigan Agriculture Environmental Assurance Program (MAEAP). We have been working with Joel Betts from the Kent Conservation District since last autumn and it has been a delightful experience. This also opens doors for grants and other USDA funding opportunities in the future. This aligns with our ongoing desire to be good stewards of the creatures, land, and water in our charge.

Learn this and you can impress your chef and farmer friends alike!
02/17/2023

Learn this and you can impress your chef and farmer friends alike!

Early spring Jacob Sheep lambs
02/14/2023

Early spring Jacob Sheep lambs

02/14/2023

Newborn lamb is just like a three year old human: "MOM MOOOOOM!"
Mom: "what?!? I'm literally right here."

I always marveled at the "sugar woods" aka the "King woods" that was part of my Grandpa Oaster's farm. It was a 5 acre l...
11/26/2022

I always marveled at the "sugar woods" aka the "King woods" that was part of my Grandpa Oaster's farm. It was a 5 acre lot of sugar maples at the back of a field. The trees had been planted by my great grandfather, Graydon Andrews, who made and sold his own maple syrup. By the time I hunted in them and made syrup with my Grandpa in those woods, the trees were large and mature (70-80 years old, likely). It always brought me awe to know that a person had planted those trees, a person who held me as a tiny baby but died before I was 1 year old. A person who had looked at that open cleared back section of field and planted hundreds of tiny saplings one hole at a time.

This fall we planted 15 maples on the south edge of our property (10 sugar maples and 5 red maples). I hope someday that myself or my kids, or perhaps total strangers, might see those trees towering over them and feel a sense of awe... and make maple syrup from them like I hope to do. Check back with me in 30 years.

 "Hogs"
11/06/2022

"Hogs"

Supporting the local live production of Rocky Horror Picture Show and local theater.
09/06/2022

Supporting the local live production of Rocky Horror Picture Show and local theater.

Thank you to our newest sponsor, Fat Toaster Farm for their "There's A Light" sponsorship level.

Who is Fat Toaster Farm, you ask?!

Fat Toaster Farm and Forge is located on the orchard ridge of Kent City, Michigan, just one mile north of the tiny village of Casnovia and only 25 minutes north of the Grand Rapids.

We make a good-faith effort to raise food for our table in an ethical and mindful way. We enjoy fiber arts, animal husbandry, forging steel, meals, farming history, social justice, and opportunities for education with our community. All of this comes alongside our ongoing commitments to our two children, our professions, and our partners and friends.

Pro-Healing, Pro-Empathy, Pro-Community, Pro-Transformation. Anti-Prison, Anti-Policing, Anti-Disposability, Anti-Dehumanization. The Future is Abolitionist.

Address

16088 Kenowa Avenue
Kent City, MI
49330

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Our Story

Fat Toaster Farm has moved to Kent City, Michigan. Located for over 8 years in Rockford, Michigan, our growing family and need for more space led us to move 20 minutes away to the new farm. With rolling orchard hills, and two towering grain silos, the setting is ideal for the next phase of our lives. Zach and Lindsay Oaster were not always farmers; in fact, neither of them grew up on a farm. In the autumn of 2009 they fulfilled a long-time dream, and bought a small six-acre property just 20 minutes north on US-131 of Michigan’s second largest city, Grand Rapids. Animals were soon to follow. The journey toward a farm started at an early age for Zach, as his paternal grandfather was a lifelong small farmer. As a child, he made trips to Grandpa and Grandma’s house to enjoy spring lambs, Belgian draft horses, and (what are now antique) John Deere tractors. When Zach was in his early 20s he spent three summers helping his aging grandfather take care of the Oaster farm in Nashville, Michigan. Many hours were spent cutting wood or mowing brush, and all the while listening to Grandpa extol the virtues of the “old ways” from when farming was a family activity. It was a lifestyle that both supported the family from the land, and required little in the lines of money and consumerism to survive. Small farming was a system that had been developed from centuries of struggle, knowledge of land management, and animal husbandry. Zach’s grandfather was a true expert – a “last of his kind” – and Zach caught a passion for those old ways during those summers on the farm. Lindsay and Zach spent several years dreaming plans for a future farm project. They were particularly interested in how to meld the “old ways” that Grandpa had taught with new emerging ideas about local “slow” food and ecologically friendly sustainable farming. The dream is now realized, and Fat Toaster Farm is the result. Ancient, unimproved, “primitive” breeds of livestock are the primary focus of the farm’s animal husbandry efforts. Jacob sheep, one old hen, and a few barn cats can be seen dotting the green pasture behind the farm house. In the past, Fat Toaster Farm has been home to Scottish Highland cattle, Silver Fox rabbits, and an assortment of heritage chickens and turkeys. Zach is currently a sociology professor, teaching at Grand Valley State University and Muskegon Community College. As a lifelong musician and artist, Zach also focuses on social justice and community building. Lindsay is a patent researcher at a Grand Rapids law firm. Both of them are passionate about farming in their spare time. The goal of the farm right now is raising as much of their own meat and fruit/vegetables as possible, expanding their knowledge of fiber arts (sheep produce wool!), and learning about the new setting and community in the midst of orchard country. Lindsay has become somewhat of an expert at crocheting, while Zach has become quite proficient at the art of spinning wool fiber into yarn. Other adventures such as tanning hides, learning how to do basic veterinary work, and various culinary, fermenting, home-brewing, and cider-making exploits have ensued. The old family farm in Nashville is now in the care of some other family, and Grandpa and Grandma Oaster have been gone many years. But, Grandpa’s old John Deere tractors (an A and a 60) are now nestled into the barn at Fat Toaster Farm. Grandpa’s collection of primitive farm tools and implements, long housed and displayed at Bowens’ Mill, is back at the farm. The Oaster farming legacy continues as Zach and Lindsay engage their community in a conversation about immigrant justice, food justice, access to healthy and high quality food for all people, neighborliness, and sharing of the commons. The goal is to learn all that is possible and pass the knowledge along via books, blogs, and conversations. Zach and Lindsay welcome your questions, mentoring, and other contributions that can help us along the way in our journey of learning. Support us by purchasing our goods at our Etsy shop, or contact us and discuss how we can work together to do good work in our shared world.