Edward "Skip" Jackson, along with his wife, are co-owners of Iron Kettle Farm. Iron Kettle Farm began as a small roadside farm selling strawberries, corn, summer vegetables, tomatoes, and some fall produce from an abandoned corncrib. The farm has continued to expand over the years and now draws visitors from all over the Northeast. The farm is such a tourist attraction that it won the Governor's Agricultural Award at the New York State Fair in 1992 and the first-ever Agriculture-Tourism Award in 1998.
During the public season (May 1 to October 31), thousands of visitors come to admire the gardens, buy plants and produce, browse in the gift store, indulge in homemade "country" foods (cider, homemade doughnuts, pies, and cookies), and visit the baby animals: goats, sheep, ducks, chickens, miniature horses, donkeys and pigs.
First it wants to be profitable. You want to be able to generate enough income so that it can pay for the extra people it's going to take run it and then generate income for the family, to sustain the whole business. And you can get spread too thin on some things and there are some things that we do...(Full transcript available to logged in subscribers.).
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