Flynn Farm

Flynn Farm Organic Family Farm est 1982 Hay Heirlooms & organic baked goods

05/27/2026

You can’t be scared of animals that’s for sure

05/26/2026

Safety is the reason I am doing this. Every box I build has one purpose behind it, to give these little ones a safer place in a world that can be so unforgiving. Through storms, freezing nights, predators, and all the challenges they face every single day, I want them to have somewhere they can rest and feel protected.

The little one looking through the window here was completely safe and went right back to bed after checking on the world outside for a moment. Moments like this remind me why I started building these boxes in the first place.

I know I cannot save them all, but if I can help even one squirrel make it through another night safely, then every late night, every design change, and every bit of effort is worth it to me. Seeing them curled up inside one of my boxes sleeping peacefully reminds me exactly why I started this journey.

Thank you to everyone who has supported me, shared my posts, or given one of my boxes a home in your yard. You are helping create safe places for lives that many people never stop to notice. That means more to me than I could ever explain.

05/24/2026

Read up on your top ten veggies and fruits you should never eat if not organic. Called the dirty dozen

05/24/2026

Guard Roos

05/23/2026

Stop

11/11/2025
11/11/2025

I’ve been hanging here for 12 days.
In 3 more, I would’ve become a Monarch butterfly—
and flown 2,000 miles to Mexico.

You just raked me into a trash bag.

Every November, thousands of chrysalises like mine are thrown away during “fall cleanup.”
We hide in leaves and stems, invisible to you.

One bag of “yard waste” can hold 20–30 butterflies still alive inside.

You call it tidy.
We call it extinction.

— A Monarch 72 Hours From Freedom 🦋💔

11/11/2025

Milkweed isn’t just a plant — it’s a lifeline.
As fall settles in and seeds ripen, this is your moment to give butterflies a future. 🌱

🦋 Why sow milkweed now
• Cold stratification happens naturally in winter
• Spring rains awaken seeds right on time
• Monarchs return looking for milkweed first

🌾 How to scatter seeds (early November)
• Choose full-sun areas
• Lightly rake soil or press seeds onto bare ground
• Don’t bury — they need light to germinate
• Leave leaf litter as a natural blanket

🍂 Plant once, support life for years.

Address

Southwick, MA

Telephone

+14135690420

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Flynn Farm posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Flynn Farm:

Share

Category