Clear Creek Wyoming Blessings of Water, Soil, and Seeds


Overlooking the Mitzel farm in Leiter, Wyoming.

While on residency at Ucross Foundation, where I was investigating the landscape of soils, Ruthie Salvatore, the residency director at Ucross, gardener, and gourmet chef to boot, asked me one day if I might like to take a trip with her to visit with La Resche Farm and Mitzel Farm. We drove east along Clear Creek surveying the historic bottomland, once filled with sugar beets and wheat. Now these fields are mostly filled with alfalfa fields....with the exception of a couple small organic farms growing local food with passion.

La Resche Farm, Clearmont, Wyoming
La Resche Farm, Clearmont, Wyoming

Carol Le Resche, operates a small organic farm near Clearmont, Wyoming. She grows a plethora of tomatoes, potatoes, greens, squash, and cucumbers, to name only a few. She talked a lot about her love of the land and the critical importance for a healthy river and clean water. She also shared a seed story about the importance of heirloom seeds and seed saving like nature does it.

While at La Resche farm, Ruthie Salvatore shared a seed story about the gourds which she loves to grow. She uses these gourds for crafts, bird houses, and seeds to grow more the next year. With great bemusement she also talked about how gourds taught her by mistake how to cure them, a natural process of drying hard over the winter.


Across Clear Creek

During our second trip out, we headed to the small town of Leiter where Mona Mitzel has slowly built the soil, several high tunnels, a small orchard, and a market farm which challenges her daily with hard work, wonderment, and utter passion to keep growing.  Her honesty to dream big is put to task in trying to keep it all organized, but these dreams also move her beyond the status-quo and into a reacher of possibility, pushing the limits of agri-culture to keep learning, trying, and working hard. She talked a lot about learning and experimenting and not in knowing it all. Mona grows organic tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, beets, squash, and greens, to name just a few. Her husband also raises beef cattle and they grow alfalfa to feed the beefies. Here Mona talks about her motivation and love to be out in the garden.

Mona Mitzel's farm, trellised tomatoes (top), happy, fat toad (middle), bell peppers (bottom)
Jeanette Hart-Mann

Jeanette Hart-Mann is a farmer, artist, activist and teacher committed to the transformative potential of traditional ecological knowledge, embodied land-based practices, creative engagement and more-than-human-relationships. Her current research is focused on agroecology, environmental justice, and eco-social storytelling. Her practice is iterative, emergent and interdisciplinary. She weaves farming, wild crafting, and ecological restoration with video, sculpture, photography, installation, fiber arts, and writing. Hart-Mann is Co-Founder and Co-Director of SeedBroadcast (seedbroadcast.org) an artist collective committed to uplifting the culture in agri-Culture through creative public engagement, Seed Stories and seed sharing. She is also lead farmer, seed steward, and shepherdess at HawkMoth Farm where she is designing and implementing experimental climate-resilient polycultures through integrative plant, animal, soil, and human habitation while producing food for local communities.  Hart-Mann is Co-Director of RAVEL at The University of New Mexico and Associate Professor of Art & Ecology. RAVEL is a field-based Art & Ecology program supporting the intersection of place-based research through art making, community-engagement and professional practice. She received her BFA, summa cum laude and University Honors, summa cum laude at The University of New Mexico and her MFA in Visual Arts from Vermont College of Fine Arts. 

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Gathering 4 Mother Earth

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Local Seeds = Local Food at the Tri-County Farmers' Market