


I have spent more than two decades living the work this farm requires—homesteading, building a business from the ground up, and earning a degree in Nutritional Science—learning how to grow, sustain, and steward both land and livelihood. Time spent in a corporate career proved my ability to succeed within that system, but it also clarifie
I have spent more than two decades living the work this farm requires—homesteading, building a business from the ground up, and earning a degree in Nutritional Science—learning how to grow, sustain, and steward both land and livelihood. Time spent in a corporate career proved my ability to succeed within that system, but it also clarified what matters most: community over corporate greed, regeneration over extraction, and work that gives back rather than takes. My life and career have been shaped by hands-on work and hard-earned knowledge. These experiences shaped the skills, resilience, and values needed to build a farm rooted in responsibility, healing, and long-term stewardship.

Our farm will be built on three commitments:
• Regenerating native habitat
• Restoring and propagating a native medicinal plant
• Cultivating medicine that supports women through every stage of life
Those commitments come together in Native Health, a regenerative farming project centered on Black Cohosh, a medicinal plant native to North Carolina.

This is slow, intentional regeneration—growing medicine where it belongs, in partnership with the forest, and offering women a proven, natural path to relief and balance.