(upbeat music)

 

- [Narrator] From the
congestion of the Kittery Malls,

take a right along Maine
Route 101 Northwest

on Wilson and Goodwin
Roads to Route 236.

This is farming country

and it has been for
several centuries.

 

- [Man] When I was younger
there were many farms

on Wilson Road and Goodwin Road.

 

Starting down at Kittery
is the Pettigrew Farm.

And then there was
Nelson Pearson,

 

The Johnsons, and across
the street from the Johnsons

was Woodland Dairy and Hy Rowan.

He milked cows and he
also processed milk.

And then, the Moulton
Farm, Larry Cashmere,

who still operates that today.

 

Still has cattle there.

 

And then the next
one would be our own.

And then Schultz was milk cows.

Before him was Frost
in there that milked.

(lively harmonica music)

 

- [Narrator] In
1771, Daniel Goodwin

joined other farmers on
this winding country road.

He raised 15 children
and had 91 grandchildren,

many of whom settled along
the same road that was

eventually named for the
many Goodwin families.

(upbeat music)

 

If you were driving
here 50 years ago,

the scenery would look
much as it does today.

 

During the growing season,
the road is bordered

with fields of alfalfa
and corn and pastures

of grass later to be
cut for hay and silage.

These crops feed dairy cows.

 

50 years ago there were
eight or nine dairy farms

along this eight mile
stretch of winding road.

Many of the farmhouses
and some of the fields

and a few of the barns remain.

 

Now there are just
two dairy farms,

the last two in
this area of Maine.

 

Five generations of the
Pettigrew family operated

the first farm at the
east end of Wilson Road.

 

The Pettigrews were
self sufficient for
most of their needs.

In addition to a
small dairy herd,

the family raised barn
yard animals for meat

and also had a large
vegetable garden

and a variety of fruit trees.

 

Home canned vegetables,
hams, turkeys, chickens,

sheep and root crops sustained

the family through the winter.

Many of the long gone
farms along this road

operated in a similar fashion.

 

Willis Pettigrew was
the last working farmer

but he stopped in the 1960s.

Like many other farmers,
Willis eventually tired

of milking his cows
twice a day in addition

to working at the
Portsmouth Naval Shipyard.

 

Today, Willis' granddaughter
has a dog kennel here.

 

Just up the road is
the Pearson place,

farmed most recently
by Nelson Pearson, Sr.,

who died in 2008.

He grew up on the
farm and eventually

bought it from his mother.

She had operated
the farm herself

for a number of years
after her husband died.

- My family bought
the farm in 1921.

And it had not
been used as a farm

 

for probably 30 years,
it'd been going down hill.

So, they end up clearing
the land that was growing up

 

and bringing it up to a
more modern type farm.

My father bought the farm
from his mother about 1947

 

and he kept farming and
modernizing 'til about '89,

 

he sold the main
part of the land.

He kept a few cows
into the early 90s.

And he hayed the property
up until about 2000, 2001.

 

He also had worked out,

he worked in the woods
when he was young

to help bring in
extra money for them.

And, my mother
worked on the farm.

She also was a delivery
mail, for the post office.

 

My father was a true
animal lover, we'll say.

He hated to see his
cows go into slaughter.

He was a non-sentimental
animal lover.

 

(video camera buzz
drowns out man)

 

- He had 38 milking
cows and then he had

 

young stock usually
around 50 to 55 head.

 

He had, I think it was about
120-some acres all together,

 

some pastureland,
mostly hay and corn.

 

- [Narrator] Now the Pearson
place is no longer a farm.

Its barn is empty but its
pastures remain productive

as others continue
to hay the fields.

 

(motor hums)

 

In 2010, Young Alex Tobey
of South Berwick was haying,

making large rolled bails
for the current owner

who has the fields
mowed and bailed

and uses the hay for his
cattle in North Berwick.

 

(birds call)

 

A half mile beyond the Pearson
Farm is the Johnson Farm.

 

The current Pearsons and
Johnsons are related.

Their grandmothers
were friends in Sweden

and emigrated to
the United States.

The women married Swedish
men and the families

first settled in Massachusetts.

In 1921, the Pearsons
bought an old

rundown farm on Wilson Road.

 

The Johnsons often
visited the farm

and their son, Chester,
enjoyed helping out.

Eventually, he
studied agriculture

at the University
of Massachusetts.

He also got to know the
Pearson's daughter, Elsa.

They married and began a farm
in Bridgewater, Massachusetts.

Chet and Elsa then
bought an abandoned farm

on Wilson Road in
1947 and built a barn.

 

They raised nine children
and operated award-winning

Rustlewood Farm together,
until Elsa's death in 2003.

 

In an oral history
interview, Chester Johnson

recalled the beginning
of that farm.

 

- We moved to Maine in '47.

 

Well this farm was
George Haye's farm,

and actually hadn't been farmed,

I think he was the
last one that mowed it,

he said he hadn't
mowed it for 22 years

and I don't think
it had been farmed

for maybe like about 35 years,

but the land was still
in pretty good shape and

Nels let me use his
tractor, well in fact

he did most of the plowing.

Then we moved up
here and Nels let me

use the field
across the road that

was Hy Rowan's that he had used.

 

That shows how farmers
treat one another.

I really appreciated that.

He helped me build
the barn and then

he wanted all the
way over to York

and rented a field over there.

He let me use that
one field, so,

 

that's the history
of North Kittery

as far as I'm concerned.

We moved up with three kids
and wound up with nine.

(crowd laughs)

There's two still on the
farm working with me now.

I was told there
were 29 dairy farms

in the early '30s
in Kittery, and now

 

we're the only one left.

- [Narrator] Today, Richard
Johnson and his wife,

Beth, operate Rustlewood Farm.

Brother David Johnson,
also works on the farm

along with several
part time people

who help with field
work, milking and
equipment maintenance.

 

- They moved up in '47 with
three kids and I think 20 cows.

They just built a brand new barn

before they moved
all the cows up.

(upbeat music)

 

Too many people can't say this,

but I've never had another job.

I've spent my entire life
working on this farm.

I've always enjoyed the
farm, always had chores to do

 

from little grasshopper
all the way up.

 

My job here in the
summertime as a kid,

I used to let the
cows out there.

They used go out to
pasture day and night.

 

We actually own
320 acres of land.

It's not all open land, it's
a lot of woods and swamps,

got a couple ponds and
streams and wetlands.

 

We also rent probably
another 100 acres

 

and I actually have 250
acres tillable of field land

 

that I actually use,
crop every year,

between corn silage and
raising alfalfa and grass.

 

I either make silage
out of the grass

or dry it down to
make bailed hay.

 

- I remember when I was like 13,

I started milking
cows but previous,

 

I guess I would just
come up here with my mom

and get to kind of like hang out

and ride my bike around,
that sort of thing.

I definitely learned what
hard work is, for sure.

And it's just, you know,
not a lot of people

get to live on a
farm and enjoy it

and it's beautiful up here.

 

- A lot of it is
hands-on experience.

I've seen about
everything you could

possibly see with cows.

I have a veterinary
that comes in,

does preg checks
with an ultrasound.

He can detect a
pregnancy at 28 days.

Other than that, I do all
the health work of the cows.

I vaccinate 'em, I dehorn
em, I hoof trim em.

Whatever it takes to kind
of keep them healthy.

We feed them a balanced
diet of corn, hay and grain.

 

We grow about 60 acres off
corn, probably another 60 acres

 

of alfalfa and the
remainder of it

is grass that we use to
chop up and make silage.

 

Anything that we chop
we store in Ag-Bags,

they call 'em, they
look like a great big

white caterpillar, as my
youngest boy would say.

 

And, the bags are 200 feet long,

they're nine feet
in diameter and

they're folded like an accordion

and the machine that
have will actually

pack it right into
the bag and push

the machine ahead
as it's packing it.

And it basically packs
it to keep the air

out of it, to keep
an air tight seal

and it stays good
for quite a while

until there's a hole pole
poked into the Ag-Bags from,

crows are the biggest problems.

Crows with corn silage,
they're buggers.

 

The corn is a real good
energy source for cows.

I mostly use the
corn for the cows

because I have plenty of
grass for the heifers.

 

Corn and alfalfa make a
real good combination.

Alfalfa is a good protein source

and corn is a good
energy source.

The two combined makes
a real good ration

for dairy cows, milking cows.

They're stored all separately,

but when they're
fed to the cows,

they're all mixed together.

When a cow takes a bite,
a mouthful of feed,

they're basically getting
all the same stuff

through every mouthful.

We still do buy a commercial
grain to balance it off.

- We met at church and he
finally caught up to me

and asked me out, and
when he told me he was

a dairy farmer, I just
thought he was pulling my leg.

I didn't believe him, you
know, until he actually

took me to the farm
and showed me around.

I was like totally amazed.

 

I register the cows like
his mother used to do.

That puts them into the
Holstein association,

gives them a name and number,
it's kind of like a pedigree,

 

who their mother and
father, or dam and sire are.

And it just kind of
gives the information

and makes them a little
bit more valuable

to people that may
want to buy them.

 

I do all the bookwork
and see all the bills

 

and pay everybody,
all the help and

the guys that come up
and do our haying for us.

And basically keep his
head screwed on tight,

so that he can keep on farming.

Feed him, feed and
water him (laughs).

I have to take
care of the farmer

so the farmer can
take care of the cows.

Yeah, I mean, it's
a constant paycheck

but that paycheck can
vary so very greatly

due to host of
things, market value,

 

what's going over as
exports and imports.

It just seems like when
farmers are not getting

 

a good price for the
milk, then they start

adding more cows on
to make more milk

and that's a problem
because then you have

a glut of milk
and then you have,

you know, a lot of
cheese sitting around

and butter and all that excess

and that just brings
your prices back down.

Over the last 2009,
it's been horrendous

and a lot of farms had
to go out of business

because they just
couldn't make it.

So, it's a constant battle.

And something that
farmers definitely have to

figure out what
they're gonna do,

dairy farmers I should say,
how they're gonna control

that milk so that they
can get a decent price

and that will sustain
them through, you know,

different varying times.

- We used to hay a lot,
and then we found out

that actually chopping
and making silage

is a lot quicker, a
lot less manual labor.

I've been doing a lot
of haying and selling

the hay for horse
hay or whatever.

And I hire a lot of
local neighborhood kids

or whatever to help pick up
the hay in the summertime

and get a pretty
good crew together

and they kinda
enjoy that at times.

(engine rumbles)

 

I sell most all the
baled hay, the dry hay.

I've actually baled as
many as 5,000 bales.

 

We have Holsteins,
they're black and white,

they're all registered.

The actually probably average
weight of our Holstein

is anywheres between
14-1700 pounds.

My cows right now
are giving anywheres

from 70 to 80 pounds
of milk a day.

And a gallon of
milk is 8.6 pounds.

 

If a cow gave 86
pounds, that would

be 10 gallons of milk
that's they give.

And I do have cows
that are giving that.

I got some cows giving
over 100 pounds of milk.

 

- I have 10 Jersey cows and was

 

selling some raw milk
here till last year

and then I teamed up
with Richard Johnson

and Richard now milks my
cows and he breeds 'em

 

and they calve, they come
back to the farm here

and calve and I raise
the calves for him.

So, we're kind of working
team work together.

He helps me out
financially with it

and I'm able to keep the cows.

 

- Right now I have
70 milking cows

and when you have 70 milking
cows, you always have

some that are what
we call dry cows.

In other words,
they're on vacation.

There's a period of 50
days where you don't

actually milk em, and
then after 50 days,

they'll be having
their baby or calf,

and then when
they're due to calf,

they'll actually
start bagging up

and it will, the
udder will become full

and swollen and
uncomfortable and (laughs)

and when they calf,
you start milking em

and some of them
don't like but they

appreciate it
afterwards (laughs).

- [Narrator] Richard
Johnson breeds

his dairy cows using
semen delivered

by Amy Jasmine.

- The semen comes
from bulls housed in

Ithaca and in
Shawano in Wisconsin.

We have, we contract
certain bulls

and we also have
our own dairy herd

out in Wisconsin
that we do a lot

of research with on the
semen and on the bulls.

(machine whirs)

 

I Will say that
the smaller farms,

the herds this size,
they're managed well

and those are the ones that are

better able to stay in
it, so it has gotten

a lot better over the last year.

The milk prices have gone up.

The only question is,
it's always a question

hopefully they'll
stay there so they can

(laughs) keep going
and make a living

not just break even, but
actually make a profit.

 

- After a cow calves,
the first six milkings

we discard, it basically
is colostrum milk,

that milk goes to
feed the calves.

We feed em with a
bottle and nipple

(clears throat) we
found out if you take

a new born calf and let
it suck on the mother,

 

you really don't know
just how much milk

the calf is getting
in and they actually

should get about
a gallon of milk

within the first
two hours of birth

but you only, most
cows give a lot more

than what the calf can drink,

so we discard the rest of it.

 

- The average working
lifespan of a veterinary now

is 30 years and three months
and I've done it for 46.

I absolutely love what I do.

Many of my young farmers
now have advanced degrees

in bovine nutrition,
bovine genetics

agronomy, type of thing
and so I'm dealing

with a much higher
educated population.

 

My work in many
respects is consulting,

 

more than hands on,
I've got Rick trained

to do a lot of
things and helping

with delivery of calves coming,

that I used to have
to run and do myself.

I have him trained in
preventative health care.

He's very very good at it.

 

Rick Johnson and
this Johnson Farm

is one of the good farms
in Northern New England

and a few years back, they won

what was called the
Green Pastures Award

which is the top dairy
farm in the state of Maine.

(upbeat music)

 

- [Narrator] Across the
street from the Johnson Farm

is the former Woodland Dairy.

Harry Cook started the business,

but it was later
acquired by Hy Rowan,

who lived and worked there with

his wife and 10 children.

They had a dairy herd
in processed milk

acquired from other farmers.

The dairy closed in the 1960s.

Robert Rowan, the
youngest children,

and his daughter
Jenna live there now

and both of them work
part time milking

for the Johnsons.

- Dad had a pasteurizing
plant down the stairs

 

and he pasteurized milk and
delivered it door to door

and delivered on Saturday
and on my days off

I used to go with
him and deliver milk.

Father had Holsteins.

- Holsteins?
- He had some golden

Guernseys to start with,
but as everybody knows,

the Holsteins give
more milk, and so they

he gradually switched
over to all Holsteins.

 

It's called green cut
where he went from

 

the chopper, green
cut everything,

and take it back
to the bunk silo,

unload it, and then
a tractor would

ride over it back and
forth to pack it down.

 

(cows moo)
(machine whirs)

- [Jenna] So I've been
milking the cows for 10 years.

I started when I
twas 14 years old,

learned how to milk a cow and

I've been using
obviously the machines

that they have
here, so I help out

milking, just the
milking portion.

Yeah, originally I
was very frightened.

I was very frightened
of the cows,

and they can kick,
so it can hurt

and at times I've
been hurt, but a lot

of people ask me
if I like farming

and enjoy the cows
and more so I really

like helping out Ricky,
he has a lot to do

on the farm and it's a good job

and such like
that, so it's good,

hard honest work and
boss taught me a lot

about what it is to work
and the work ethic here.

Definitely has one
of those here, so.

 

(machine whirs)

 

- Been driving,
hauling milk since 1965

 

and it's been a
long time, really.

On this road, I've been
driving on this road there

for quite a few
years, had about five,

six farms I used to pick
up then on this road.

One of them was David
Leavitt and Larry Cashmere,

 

and Freddy Schultz, and
Mr Johnson over here

 

and then his,
there's another farm

down the road's
a relation to him

over there down the road and

 

I've picked up a lot
of milk in my days.

Years ago, a big
farm, that was two,

three thousand pounds
of milk, now it's

a big farm is 30,000,
that's half a truck load.

That's the way it is
now, 'cause they had to

put up more volume so
they could make it.

 

But I've seen a lot of
farms go out of business.

(machine beeps)
(machine whirs)

Yeah, got 16 farms
and one day and put it

in a 3500 gallon
tank, we thought

that was pretty good
(laughs) but now

we're hauling 69,000
pound on a 22 wheeler

 

and so that's pretty good.

 

Today's going to Franklin, Mass,

over at Garelick
and that's where

I've been hauling every
other day I go there.

 

Hood's, sometimes
we go over to Hood's

when they need it in Portland.

 

And West Lynn in Lynn,
Mass, we go there.

 

Started six o'clock this morning

 

and I won't get
back to garage until

probably about eight
o'clock tonight

if everything goes good (laughs)

and so it is, you know,
that's milk business.

 

You never know.
(machine whirs)

- [Narrator] Larry and
Nancy Cashmere moved

to the Moulton Farm in 1973.

He is descended from
Major Joseph Hammond

who arrived in
South Eliot in 1670.

 

Later members of
the Hammond family

spread to East Eliot and York.

A Hammond daughter
married a Moulton,

beginning the Moulton farm.

Sylvester Moulton built
the current house in 1840.

 

Although no longer
dairy farming,

Cashmere still has a small herd.

More pets than anything
else, and he does

custom sawing with
a portable rig.

His 150 acres of
fields and woods

stretches from
Goodwin Road to the

marshes of the York River.

Larry hopes that
one day, his land

will be preserved as open space.

 

- We moved here in 1973.

 

Over the course of three years,

we got the place ready
to start milking cows

and so in '76 we
started shipping milk,

in September of '76.

 

I had the bright idea I
wanted to be a dairy farmer.

(laughs) I did it till '99.

 

Yeah, and it got
to a point where

I decided the price
of milk goes down,

the kids were all gone.

 

It's just too much
work for the two of us.

 

So I figured now's the time
to get rid of the animals.

 

We had 91 milkers
and we had 90 heifers

so we had about 180, 181 head.

 

I think it was bigger
than Johnsons even, yeah.

Johnsons at the time
about 160 head, I believe.

 

Yeah, they're my pets,
there's 20 of em.

 

Nah, just I don't
know, I just like

having em around
(laughs) I don't know.

 

Everybody asks me,
why do I keep em

I don't know, I still grow corn,

I still crow 19 acres of corn.

I still maintain the fields.

 

Back in the '70s
we bought some land

so it's up to a
area of 150 acres.

 

Not much for row furnace,
it all goes down back.

I don't know so much
of the saw mill's just

something to do,
something else to do.

I enjoy cutting wood,
I need to cut wood

for my own use,
people come around

like they have some logs
cut out for themselves.

They like the thicker
number, especially

for your older homes,
they require a little bit

thicker than what
there is today.

 

- [Narrator] In Eliot
the rolling fields

of David and Jeannie
Leavitt, once a dairy farm

and now a productive
haying operation,

catches the eyes of passers by.

 

The beauty of the
roadside hay field

belies its utilitarian purpose.

The story of the Leavitt
family is typical

of many former diary farms.

(machine whirs)

 

- I started in 1958.

 

My father had decided
he did not wanna

milk cows anymore,
my brother and I

didn't want the cows
to go and we agreed to

keep milking them
even though we were

still in high school, I
was a senior at the time

my brother was a freshman.

 

I graduated from
high school, I also

played baseball through
the fall season.

My brother would milk
nights so I could do that

and that was the very beginning.

(machine whirs)

 

My father lost his farm in
a disastrous fire in 1956.

 

(fire crackles)

 

He was not comfortable
with borrowing money

and the credit that had
been extended to him

to get going again
and he wanted out

 

and that's when my brother and I

decided to milk the cows.

In 1963, I purchased the cattle
and the machinery from him

 

and then later on,
I purchased the farm

I think about 1965,
didn't have a house on it,

my father kept his house,
but I bought the barns

and all the land, and then about

 

1967, Jeanne and I
built a new house

down where the new
barn was located

 

and I bought other
land and added to that

and at one time I
owned about 232 acres

of which about 105
were crop land.

It grew all the feed for
the dairy herd that we had

and we only had
to buy the grain.

After we got rid of
the cows, we sold some

of that land off, so that
the present operation

is 131 acres left
here and about 60

to 65 of that is crop
land that we hay.

 

When we first got
married, Jeanne worked

on the Air Base Exchange.

When she was pregnant
with the first child

she came back on the farm,
worked on the farm with me.

(upbeat music)

 

- It's been nice
being a farmer's wife

raising our children here.

They've worked hard,
kept em out of trouble.

 

They've learned a lot of things

that they've been
able to take with em

into their adult
life and they've all

got different jobs
now that don't pertain

to the farm but they
seem to come back

and help us on the farm.

So they still enjoy it.

 

- My farming knowledge and genes

would go back
through my mother's

side of the family, her
father John S. Barnard

came to Eliot in
1906 and he bought

the airport property,
it was about 260 acres

in that at the time, he
was an orchard farmer,

he had other
businesses, he milked

a few cows and did
a lot of things

but my mother grew up
on that hill over there

at the airport and she
married the farmer,

Mills Goodwin, who
owned this farm

out here on Goodwin
Road, and he only lived

a year and he died
and she became

the sole owner of the place.

And my grandfather that
was called on there,

he milked his cows
at the airport

and he came over and took
care of her herd of cows

and eventually he
moved his over here

and he still, he
ran the whole place

which was probably
350-400 acres of land

 

that he farmed and.

My father started
working for him

and eventually married my mother

 

and everything was
going great because

my grandfather was
running the place

my father was just really
a hired hand around here

but when my grandfather
died, he became

the soul operator and
he did not like that.

He really didn't.

 

I can remember now
when I was a kid

following him round
the barn, he used to

turn his hat around
backwards when

he was milking the
cows and he'd lean up

on the flanks and
he was singing away

over and over he said
once I was happy,

but look at me now,
I'm tied to the tail

of this old brown cow (laughs)

and so when I came
along and he had

an opportunity to get
out and it took him

20 years, he had
a 20 year detour

on what he wanted
to do before he

before I came along
and took over the farm

and he could leave
and he went on

to work for the state of Maine

as a field man
for the Tax Bureau

but when Jeanne
got more involved

in the operation, we decided to

go with registered Holsteins and

 

that's when we decided
we'd set a number

that we would milk
just 40 and just

try to keep improving
the herd and culling out

the less desirable ones.

We didn't feed much hay.

We'd feed maybe four,
five, six pounds of hay

per cow per day, we
chopped all the first crop

put it in the silos
and we could do that

earlier in the year and
it made better feed,

higher protein and we
used to grow alfalfa

for the protein and
that is a hard crop

 

to make in the hay anyway,
so that's the only thing

this part of the country
you can do with it

is to make it into silage.

 

We used that for
the protein source

and then we grew corn
silage for the energy.

Then we blended those
two in a feed wagon

and we fed it right
on top of the ground

to the cows at the feed bunk
and they stood out there

in the sleet, the rain,
snow, wind whatever

and they ate (laughs).

 

When we first started,
we hired part-timers.

Larry Cashmere
took in work for us

for two years, he
milked once a day for us

that helped, then following him,

Robert Rowan worked here.

Paul Randalf comes
to mind as one of em.

 

- I went to work
for Frank Sergeant,

who lived over on
the Beech Road and

 

Frank took me over
one day to see

David Leavitt and David
Leavitt gave me a job.

I was 11 years old and I worked

every day after
school and Saturday

and Sundays and I
enjoyed it immensely.

 

(cock crows)

 

- We had full time help.

We had the time off,
but we didn't have

as much money to travel
or do what we wanted

and it just, the farm
wasn't big enough

to support two families with it

 

and we milked cows for 30 years

 

and then in the 1980s,
the dairy business

turned down, for us
anyway, and we decided

that it was time to
take the money out

and we sold the herd.

(upbeat music)

 

Well after we sold
the cows, I thought

I was gonna retire (laughs).

 

Well I found out that I
didn't like that particularly,

and also pay the taxes
and keep things up

that we needed and
wanted, I needed

more income, so we
decided to go back

into the haying business
and there's a pretty good

market in this
part of the country

for a small bale of hay,
for the horse people

and alpacas and
sheep and goats and

 

a lot of small farms buy hay and

that has become profitable
for a side line.

It would be hard to
make a full living on it

but on our small
farm, it's very good

supplemental income and in 2011,

 

we put 8100 bales of hay.

 

Up until just a short time ago,

I did that haying
pretty much myself.

We took in, we bought
an automatic bail wagon

which picks that
hay up in the field

and sets it into the barn and

you don't have to stack it.

The mulch barn we
still stack by hand

and my kids were called
in to help on that

and they did so,
but at one time,

I mowed the hay,
I tended the hay

I raked the hay, I baled
the hay and hauled the hay

and that hay wasn't
touched by human hands

until we loaded
in on a truck and

sold it to customers.

(upbeat music)

 

- [Narrator] Just
beyond the Leavitt farm

is the home of Eleanor Pearsall.

For several decades, she
and her husband David

sold and serviced
Case farm tractors

and related farming equipment.

Born 84 years ago in the house

where she now lives,
Eleanor remembers when

nearly every place on
Goodwin Road was a farm.

(upbeat music)
Most of them owned

by families named Goodwin.

 

- One day my husband
came in and he said

you know, he said, the
man from Massachusetts

from Rowley that
repairs Case tractors

keeps coming in here, he keeps

coming down to repair
Mr. Blake's tractors,

he has two Case tractors
and he's getting tired

of coming all this way to put in

a 50 cent bolt, so he
came in and he said

to my husband, why
don't you take on

the Case franchise
tractor business.

So my husband came
in and he said

how would you like to
get into tractor business

and I said my, I don't
know anything about it

but I guess we
could, and I pictured

one tractor In
the yard out here.

Little did I know
they came by 12s.

They came by 12 agricultural
and 12 industrial.

They came by 12
manure spreaders,

12 plows, 12 bailors, 12 rakes,

and I had panic city
when I of course

saw the invoices coming
in, but we made a go of it.

I worked nights nursing
and then I'd work

in the garage in the
parts department all day.

I didn't know a
bailor needle from

the plowshare, but I
sure learned (laughs).

 

- [Narrator] John Sullivan was

a farm worker in his
youth, but he spent

his working life elsewhere.

What remained for him was a love

of tractors and
eventually, he began

to buy old tractors
and restore them.

One or two tractors
have led to many more,

mostly bright green John Deeres.

 

- Well, when I worked
down here on this farm,

I used the John Deere,
that John Deere B here,

 

the John Deere A, he used that,

and I used the John Deere B and

when I got out of
Simplex, went to

the Navy Yard to
work, there was a guy

in there looking for
a cut down tractor

and the guy in the machine shop

said he had a regular tractor.

He said it was a
John Deere, this guy

said I don't want it,
would you like it,

you like John
Deeres, so I went up

to look at it and
ended up buying that.

While we was waiting
for the coil to dry

in the oven to get it started,

we went over to his
father's, which was

Fred Oback, and he had
another John Deere,

the same model with a
mowing machine on it

out in the barn so
we looked at that and

 

then he said we've
got another one

for what we use for
parts out in the pasture,

so I went and looked
at that and ended up

buying all three of em
and bringing em home.

I sold one, used the
other one for parts

and I ended up buying
John Deere Ls and LAs,

I had about six of
them for a while but

I didn't like them
too good and I bought

these big As what I
use in the parade.

Got one there that's 1936,
I pulled it all apart

sand blasted it, primed
it and painted it

and put new fenders,
tires, rings,

valve job and done it
all over I used that

in parades, shows all the time

and I got a John Deere
40 that I just done

redone last year, I
got a John Deere H

in the shed, one
of the first ones

I ever bought there,
and I got a couple

more John Deere As
hanging around here.

And I bought a Kubota
way back when they

first came out to
mow my lawn with.

I ended up I got
three of them now

and I got a Silver
King in the shed.

I got a Gibson in
the shed and I got

 

seven pedal tractors,
all different makes

here and there, yep (laughs).

 

- Bert Tuttle knew farmers
were a thirsty bunch

so in 1903, he bought
a used cider press

and began King Tut's Cider Mill,

turning out barrels of
cider for local consumption.

 

Now, more than a
hundred years later,

Bert's grandson, Ken, continues

the family tradition
using the original press

in the original building.

From late September
through the end

of the year, Tuttle
produces choice,

sweet cider from
crisp Maine apples.

 

- Yep, my grandfather
bought the mill used

and he put it together
in 1903, so I'm not sure

how old the thing
really is, but it's been

running every yeah since.

(machines whir)

And we had a farm, we
had about 200 acres

of dairy farm and
he put the mill in

just to make cider
for the farmers.

(machine clacks)

 

Every farm had their own orchard

so he was only
open for four weeks

out of the year just
while the apple season

was going on.
(machine whirs)

 

He had a saw mill, and the slabs

from the saw mill used
to run the press here

which was run by steam.
(machine whirs)

 

He was a conductor on the PD&Y,

which is the Portsmouth,
Dover and York

railroad line, or trolley
line, out back here

and he wired into
that for electricity

back in the 30s and
busted up the boiler

and started using
electric motors,

which mad it a lot
easier, more convenient.

(machine whirs)
(machine hisses)

 

We buy apples from
all over the area,

we don't have our own orchards.

(machines clack)

 

Dump em in, grind em up.

(machine whirs)

 

And then there's a 50 ton press

that squeezes the juice
out in the cheese cloths.

(machine clacks)

 

(machine whirs)

 

(machine clacks)

 

And the juice is
transferred to a

bottling facility
and we bottle it

into gallons and half
gallons and pints.

(machine clacks)

 

And it goes out into the
store and under refrigeration.

We're only open
weekends, so any time,

come on down and
the end of September

till Christmas, and get some of

the best cider in
the country (laughs).

 

- [Narrator] Most
farmers say farming

is in their blood.

They begin working
on the family farm

as youngsters, and
eventually acquire the farm

when their parents retire.

For Fred Schultz, farming
came later in life.

He caught lobsters as
a high school student,

graduated from college,
and then worked

in Portsmouth for his
father's frankfurter

and sausage making business.

 

In the 1960s, he
and his wife Tony,

bought an old farm in Eliot.

Soon they became farmers too.

Fred mainly works
alone, although he often

has assistance with milking.

 

- My father had
horses, race horses

and I learned the value of

 

the attraction of trying
to breed better animals and

 

just really take
an enjoyment from

the care of the animals
and the nourishment

of em and trying
to do everything

as good as you can to
make as comfortable

and productive an
animal as you can and

when I was a kid in high school,

every summer I caught lobsters.

That's very similar,
doesn't sound similar,

probably to the
average person, but

it's similar in that
you're on your own,

 

every day you gotta
get up and do something

and make something
out of the day

and it's your responsibility and

really if you start with
that, you can do something.

1968 I was in college
and casting around

 

looking while at the
same time I was working

for my father, I was
finishing college at night.

 

I kinda thought I
had a career with

my father's business,
he had a very successful

sausage business, but as I

 

as time went on
and I really grew

to like the place I
increasingly became

attracted to this way
of life and I started

in earnest in 1976 on my own.

(machine whirs)

 

Chester Frost bought
the little parcel

 

over there in about
1860 and then he added

 

this major piece,
the Gowan piece in 19

about 1900 and the other one was

 

from a Shapley, in
the Shapley years,

their cemetery is
across the street there

 

and they constructed those
two barns over there.

So I started out with purebreds,

they are purebred,
but I start keeping

the papers up

 

this is the second herd I've had

and the second herd
I didn't have time

really to do it, but
I know the lineage

of all of em, I keep
a record of that

and right now
there's about 80 head

on the farm, there's
about 45 cows

 

and 45 milking cows as they say.

 

The bankers always
wanna know how many

milking cows you have,
how many young stock.

There's about 40/45 milking cows

we were miking this
morning 37 cows

produced about 2300/2400
pounds of milk today

 

yesterday, so and
there's probably about

 

so that means there's
about 40 young stock.

There's two animals
right over there in heat

that's one of the
primary jobs I have is

to keep them bred and
keep em reproducing.

 

(upbeat music)

 

Generally, you try to keep a cow

as long as you can, you
enjoy sustaining the cow,

seeing the cow go
through the cycles

of calving, milking, breasting,

 

starting it again and
you try your damnedest

to keep em happy and healthy.

 

But it's a constant
learning experience.

 

It's constantly challenging.

 

And you get the
feelings sometimes

you don't do as good
a job as you should

or you can't and you
have to pay for it.

 

It's very important
what you get done

at this time of
year, get your first

 

crop off on hay
as soon as you can

to make the best
feed you can for em

 

to get your corn
planted and get things

set up for the whole year.

 

So a day like today you get up,

it's the same as every
day and you first

take care of your
cows, that's the way

I look at it, is
the cows come first.

 

- And when we got
married, that's when

he informed me that
some day he's going

to have a farm, oh I
guess it must have been

probably 10 years later,
we did have a farm

and we didn't have
cows then, it was

a real mess, the farm,
the house was a mess and

after a couple of years
fixing the house up

and the fields a
little, we, I decided

 

we probably should have
a cow, so we got a cow

and we named her
Blossom and from there

Fred liked it and used to visit

Dave Leavitt's farm and
Frank Sergeant's farm

and to learn about
farming because Fred has

 

an education, he's
a English major

and he also has a
degree in sociology

 

but he didn't have any
knowledge of farming

and cows and animal husbandry so

 

then we had five
cows and he started

milking em all himself,
he still worked

in Portsmouth and we
got to about 15 cows

he stopped working in Portsmouth

 

and we'd milk the cows.

At that time, I
think Fred was doing

all the milking and
the two older children

and I would do chores,
we'd take care of calves

and clean the aisles
and help feed and

 

then of course as
the years went by

we got more and
more cows and then

at one point I started
milking and as the girls

got older, they started
milking and then

our son came along
and eventually

all the children had
chores in the morning

before they went to
school, so they'd get up

in the morning and run
out and do their chores

and come in and take
their clothes off and

 

wash themselves up because
they didn't wanna smell

and go off and then at
night, when they came home

from school, we used
to eat supper early.

We'd eat around
four, 4:30, and then

we'd go do the chores,
because otherwise,

we didn't know what time
we would get in at night

because there's always
something happening in the barn.

(upbeat music)

 

- Today I'm gonna do,
I'm gonna chop that

 

grass feed I made
three, four days ago.

It's really finest kind of feed.

 

We've had this dry
weather and I cut it

really a great pleasure
to make feed like that

in comparison to, for example,

last year it just seemed
to rain all the time

it was tough and so

 

it's all about after
you get your cows

taken care off,
getting in the middle

of the day, your
equipment maintained

and operating right.

 

And the other thing is the cows

have to out every day
for a certain amount

of time and depending
on how hot it is,

like today it looks
like it's gonna be

real nice, I'm gonna put
em out in the afternoon.

So they don't like
wind, they don't like

hot sun, and they don't
like a hard rain, so.

 

You kinda work around that.

 

They're like you and
I that you can see

they look forward when
the weather's good,

when the weather's
nice, you can see

they look forward
to getting out,

walking around, you
know bumping each other,

 

being in the herd
and you can see

they enjoy it, I always
have in the summertime,

 

when you have that hot weather,

it's hot all day and the barn is

you try to keep it, as
much air going through

the barn as you can,
it's comfortable,

but it's not like outside
and it's quite a feeling

that at night,
when they're milked

 

and you put, I try to
when the weather's right

to turn em out all night
and they just love it.

They march out and
I have feed for em

outside in those
racks and they just

march out, take a drink of water

and the air is so
different, you can just

appreciate how
much they like it.

 

All right, all right,
all right, come on.

 

Ready.

 

Come on.
(cow moos)

Come on.
(bucket clangs)

 

Come on.

 

- [Narrator] What
does the future hold

for other farms on
this winding road?

 

From Route 1 in
Kittery to Route 236,

there are nearly 1000
acres of open land

along route 101.

With good highways
near by, Kittery

and Eliot residents
can easily commute

to jobs in Portsmouth and Dover

and even Portland,
Manchester, and Boston.

Prime, open land no
longer farmed or hayed

becomes ripe for
residential development.

 

What happened to
those other farms

on Wilson and Goodwin roads?

Some farmers worked
until they died

or got too old to
work the long hours

necessary to maintain the farm.

If there were no family
members to carry on

then the farmer's
family sold off the cows

and the farm closed.

Other farmers, perhaps
tired of the long hours

and low pay just gave up farming

and in many cases, went to work

at the Portsmouth
Naval Shipyard.

The Pearson Farm
lasted more than

half a century, but
it too finally ended.

Its fields sold to other farmers

and its milking shed
became a machine shop.

Nelson Pearson Jr.
is not optimistic

about the future of
dairy farming in Maine.

- It really started,
earlier, I mean a small

10 cow, 12 cow operation
replaced by 20 cows.

Everybody said you got 20 cows

you can make a living,
so they had 20 cows

and then they went,
they said well it was 32

was the magic number,
so people worked the 32,

other ones dropped out,
and then of course the

 

Boat Tank pickup came and
was quite an investment

to most farms and
then there was a

 

and equipment changed, faster,
more expensive equipment

plus help and it slowly
couldn't keep up.

 

People kept dropping
out and an awful lotta

 

people that were
dairy and they slowly

fell by the wayside, well
now there's only a few left.

- The farming community
here in Northern

New England, there
were many more farms,

now there are, the
number's a lot less

but the number of
cattle probably

is the same or even more.

When I got out of
veterinary college in '66,

probably the average
number of cows

on the dairy farm was 25 or 30.

The smallest farm that
I take care of now

milks 65 and I have
several that milk 500.

 

I have many that milk
a hundred to 200.

Here at the Johnson Farm, I mean

back in '66 they
were probably milking

40 cows, now they milk
99, so for every farm

that went out, the
other farms expanded

and so the number
of cattle probably

hasn't changed
really much of any.

Today, I will make four stops.

In 1966, a normal day
perhaps was 12 stops.

- [Narrator] Fred Schultz
has a passion for farming.

He enjoys working with the cows

and producing fields
of high quality corn,

hay and alfalfa.

His children have other careers,

so the farm likely
will end when Fred

is no longer able to manage it.

He has no plans for
the farm's future.

 

- Well right now, it
would go to my wife

and she would probably,
she would no doubt

sell off the cows
and in concert with

 

my four other children,
I've got four children

that have good judgment,
they're all adults now and

 

they're all competent
but none of them

 

have any interest
in, well my son would

like to see it stay a farm, but

 

when you combine that with the

 

necessity to do
something with this

because you know, a place
once someone stops caring

for it, it starts to fragment.

 

I know that if a
person wants to have

a dairy farm here,
you have to have

the person with the mindset
and the skills to do it.

Especially the mindset
because a person

needs to be feels
responsible for these animals

an empathy for them and
enjoyment from them.

 

- [Narrator] Dave
Leavitt cares for

his fields like a golf
course greens keeper.

He has been at it for
more than 50 years

but each time he hays
requires at least

five trips across the fields,

usually on hot, sunny days.

Even driving the
tractor is hard work.

Often he cuts his
fields three times

in the season.

What will happen to
the farm when he is

no longer here to manage it?

 

- My feelings and maybe
not my wife's feelings

 

completely, but if
something happened to me

'cause she would own
the farm, if something

happened to both
of us, it would be

divided up among our
four children equally

in some method, probably
have to survey it

and give em each a part of it

'cause we gave em
the thing as a whole,

they'd fight over it.

 

I don't know if
there's a future for it

as far as agriculture,
I think probably

more recreational
and I've got a couple

of kids that are somewhat
interested in that and

 

that's kinda what we

 

are looking at right
now, but I don't wanna do

anything to it that
would tie their hands.

When I received it,
I had the freedom

to do what I wanted
with it, you have to

make the changes that
come along in life

and I would want
the same for them.

That they could do
what they thought

they had to do to make
it pay and make it gold.

 

Whether any one of em
could make a living

on it without any outside
income, I don't know.

 

Every farmer wants
his farmer to continue

wants somebody in
the family to run it,

want it to succeed,
especially when you have

a herd of registered
Holsteins, you hope

they'll take it over,
they can keep breeding

the cattle and continue,
but in this area

 

it just isn't easy
to stay farming.

 

- So like I say,
I have enjoyed it,

I don't wanna leave
it, I wanna stay here

the rest of my life, it's
really a nice place to live.

(somber music)

 

- [Narrator] For
Richard Johnson,

the continuation
of the family farm

has been difficult.

He was a partner with his father

and an older brother,
but Chester died in 2007

and the brother
wanted out of farming,

although he remained a
part-owner of the property.

That left Richard alone
to operate the farm.

Richard loves farming and
he loves the farm land.

To settle financial
issues and preserve

the farm for the future,
Richard has begun working

with Kittery Land Trust to
sell the development rights

and create an
agricultural easement.

The process is
complicated and will take

several years to complete.

The farm includes
streams that flow

into Spruce Creek
and the York River

and it has acres of
both fields and forests.

As time passes, this
land will remain

and important natural
resource for Kittery.

- This is kinda like
a dream come true,

this conservation easement,
I've always fought along

 

the way growing up
to not let somebody

build here or buy that
or put a road down

through the fields or
whatever, I always wanted

to maintain the original acres.

If this went to houses, I
think it would have been

a domino effect going
right up the road

with all the other
field land that the

other farmer's
have, but hopefully,

with this conservation easement,

it might be just the opposite,

time will tell and
I'm sure later on

down the road, it
will be the best thing

that ever happened.

 

- To get back to
your grass roots

is something that is necessary

for all of us, I
mean you can't forget

what came before
because otherwise,

what are we gonna
have in the future?

Somebody's gotta farm,
somebody's gotta fish,

somebody's gotta
cut lumber and do

those kinds of things
that are basic,

but very necessary, we
can't live without that.

 

It just, it's so
beautiful, I just can't

imagine seeing it turned
into anything else.

And we wanna protect that beauty

and I'd rather see
it growing something

than growing houses.

- [Narrator] Wilson
and Goodwin Roads

bisect a large portion
of the remaining

open space in Kittery and Eliot.

Along this winding road,
for several centuries,

people have cared
for their land as

they grew crops, hayed
fields, raised animals

and carefully cut
their wood lots.

When we began to film
this story in 2009,

the future of the open
land along Route 101

was unknown, now
the recent decision

of the Johnsons, ensures
that their undeveloped

fields and woodlands
will always border

at least part of the road.

 

(machine whirs)

 

Land protection
can happen quickly,

but farm land lost
to development

can never be reclaimed.

Eliot's open space plan
is calling attention

to the need for land protection.

Organizations such as
the Kittery Land Trust

and the Great Works Land Trust

provide a means for
individuals and communities

to permanently set aside
important and threatened acreage

for environmental
protection, water resources,

habitat preservation
and scenic beauty.

 

These historical farms
may be forgotten in time,

but the preservation
of their acres

will be a continual
reminder of the foresight

of the people in
the 21st century

and maybe, just maybe,
many years from now,

others will come to
these fertile lands

and, like the 20th
century Pearsons

and Johnsons, they will
bring the old farms

back to life, continuing a
tradition along Route 101.

 

- [Deidre] One,
two, three, four.

("Dig" by Deidre Randall)

 

♪ Dig

♪ Dig

♪ Down in the soil

♪ Almost time to
till the fields ♪

♪ So you change
the tractor's oil ♪

♪ Down in your heart

♪ Down where you steep

♪ You have always known

♪ How to dig deep

♪ The corn goes in

♪ Comes up green

♪ Wind shakes the tassels high

♪ As far as the eye can see

♪ Down in your heart

♪ Down where you know

♪ You have got a way

♪ Of making things grow

 

♪ It's been your family's land

 

♪ For 200 years

 

♪ Who'll be next in line

♪ To keep the farm

 

♪ Heavy hoof

♪ Copper bell

♪ You raise them up

♪ You treat them well

♪ Up at the farm
it's three a.m. ♪

 

♪ That Jersey Delilah
is calving again ♪

 

♪ Earth and land

♪ Land and sky

♪ Once it's gone
won't get it back ♪

♪ No matter what you try

♪ Down in your heart

♪ Down where you steep

♪ You have always known

♪ How to dig deep

 

♪ It's been your family's land

♪ For 100 years

 

♪ Who'll be next in line

♪ To keep the farm