Ten Acres Β· Est. 2018 Β· Within 30 Miles

Grown Here. Sold Here.
Nothing Else.

Heritage-breed chickens. Heirloom tomatoes. Cover-cropped soil. Everything sold within thirty miles of the dirt it grew in.

Scroll to walk the farm
🌱 Transparent Process

Seed to table. Every step.

Scroll through the actual lifecycle of your food. Not a marketing summary β€” the real process, with the inconvenient details included.

Seed Sourcing01

We order from three heirloom seed houses

Every variety has a name and a history. Brandywine tomatoes from a 1885 Mennonite strain. Dragon Tongue beans that go yellow-and-purple when they're ready. We don't buy seeds from catalogs that also sell synthetic fertilizer β€” that's a line we drew early and haven't crossed.

Seed inventory updated each January
Heirloom seed packets spread on worn wooden table, some open with seeds visible
Bed Amendment02

Composted manure from the flock, nothing bought in

The chickens do more than lay eggs. Their manure composts for eight months before it touches a bed. We test soil pH every fall. When we say the tomatoes taste different, that's not marketing β€” it's the difference between a plant fed synthetic nitrogen and one fed a slow-release biology that took a year to build.

Soil test results available on request
Hands working rich dark compost into garden bed soil, morning light
No-Spray Policy03

"No-spray" means no spray β€” not "minimal spray"

We use row cover for aphids. We hand-pick hornworms. We plant marigolds along every bed edge because they actually work. There's no exemption for 'organic-approved' pesticides β€” if it would kill a beneficial insect, it doesn't come on this land. That's the whole policy, unabbreviated.

Last pesticide application: never
Close-up of marigold flowers planted between vegetable rows as natural pest deterrent
Harvest04

Cut the same morning it ships or sells

The Saturday stand opens at 7 a.m. We start cutting at 5. Chef orders get a text at 6 a.m. with what's actually ready β€” not what was ready yesterday. The Sun Golds peak for about nine days in August. If you miss that window, you wait a year. We're not going to pretend otherwise.

Harvest log posted every Thursday
Freshly harvested tomatoes and greens in wooden crates in early morning light
🌾 Week of February 24, 2026

What's ready this week.

Updated every Thursday morning. If it's not on this list, we don't have it. No substitutions, no rain checks.

Cluster of golden orange Sun Gold cherry tomatoes on vine in warm sunlight
🌞 Peak Week
$6per

Sun Gold Tomatoes

Solanum lycopersicum "Sun Gold"

12 ozper pint

Best nine days of the year. They split if you wait.

Large irregular pink-red Brandywine heirloom tomatoes on rustic wooden surface
🌞 Peak Week
$8per

Brandywine Tomatoes

Solanum lycopersicum "Brandywine"

1 lb avgper lb

Ugly, irregular, and the best tomato you will eat this year.

Brown and speckled heritage chicken eggs in a woven basket on hay
⚑ Limited
$7per

Pasture-Raised Eggs

Heritage mixed flock

12 eggsper dozen

Collected and candled same morning. 14 dozen available this week.

Colorful yellow and purple Dragon Tongue beans freshly harvested in a colander
🌞 Peak Week
$5per

Dragon Tongue Beans

Phaseolus vulgaris "Dragon Tongue"

8 ozper half-lb

Yellow with purple streaks when raw. Turn green when cooked.

Deep green Tuscan lacinato kale leaves with distinctive crinkled texture
⚑ Limited
$4per

Tuscan Kale

Brassica oleracea "Lacinato"

6 ozper bunch

Last bunches before heat stress sets in. Dark, crinkled, sweet.

Round pale yellow lemon cucumbers growing on vine with tendrils
🌿 Ready Soon
$4per

Lemon Cucumbers

Cucumis sativus "Lemon"

3–4 per lbper lb

Coming in next week. Round, pale yellow, no bitterness.

🌱

A note on availability

We don't buy wholesale to fill gaps. If the beans aren't ready, there are no beans. If a hailstorm took out the kale, we'll tell you. The harvest list is exactly what it says β€” what we actually harvested this week.

πŸ“ From Scratch to Carton

The eggs are collected at five. You get them by seven.

Heritage-breed mixed flock β€” Rhode Island Reds, Barred Rocks, Ameraucanas. They rotate across 2.5 pasture acres. What they eat shows up in the yolk: orange, standing tall, not running.

Chickens free-ranging on green pasture in early morning golden light
πŸ₯š

Collected 5–6 a.m.

Nest boxes checked twice. Nothing sits overnight.

πŸ’‘

Candled immediately

Each egg held to light. Cracks, blood spots, double yolks β€” all caught.

πŸ“¦

Packed and chilled

Cartons labeled with collection date, not a sell-by fiction.

🚚

Out by 7 a.m.

Saturday stand or direct delivery. Same day, always.

14dozen

This week

Collected Monday–Saturday, 5 a.m.

100%

Candled same morning

Every egg checked before it ships

2.5acres

Pasture rotation

Moved to fresh ground every 10 days

0

Added hormones

Ever. Not a policy β€” a practice.

Close-up of brown eggs being held in muddy hands just after collection from nest boxes

The Flock

Three heritage breeds

Rhode Island Reds for the brown eggs. Ameraucanas for the blue. Barred Rocks because they're tough and the kids named them all.

What they eat

Pasture insects, cover crop seeds, kitchen scraps, and non-GMO layer feed from a mill forty minutes north. No soy filler.

The yolk tells you

Deep orange. Stands up. Doesn't run. Crack one next to a grocery store egg and you'll understand why people text at 6 a.m.

πŸ›’ Direct Sales

Build your box. Pick what's ready.

Toggle what's in harvest this week. No minimums. No mystery boxes. You pick it, we pack it the morning it ships.

Toggle to add β€” 2 items selected

Your Box

Box size

Sun Gold Tomatoes$6
Pasture-Raised Eggs$7
Subtotal$13.00
Box discount-$0.65
Total$12.35

We'll confirm by text. Pickup at the stand or local delivery.

Who comes here

The people who already know.

"
I text at 6 a.m. asking what's ready to cut. They always answer. The Sun Golds this August were the best thing I served all season β€” and I'm not easy to impress.
MD

Marcus Delacroix

Executive Chef, The Larder Room

Orders 3–4 times per week during peak season

"
We switched after reading one too many egg carton labels that said 'cage-free' but meant something else entirely. The yolks here are orange. My kids notice the difference. That's enough for me.
PV

Priya Venkataraman

Saturday regular, North Side

Subscriber since spring 2024

"
The harvest list they post every Thursday is the most honest piece of food writing I read all week. 'Last bunches before heat stress sets in' β€” that's a restaurant telling you the truth. I buy everything on it.
JK

James Kowalczyk

Home cook, weekly box subscriber

Bi-weekly box, every 2 weeks since 2023

You've walked the whole farm now.

Within 30 miles of the dirt it grew in. Always.