Five Marys IN THE NEWS

 
 
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FIVE MARYS VOTED

BEST FARM in AMERICA in 2018

Honored to be nominated and voted by Paleo Magazine readers as their favorite farm in 2018!

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Carhartt on the Ranch

We had an experience we'll never forget when Carhartt and the Pride of Gypsies production team all descended on the ranch for four days to document our daily life and get some special footage for two commercials... one on the history of Carhartt and one honoring hard working mothers everywhere

And I'm as proud as ever to wear my Carhartts on a daily basis - whether I'm feeding cows and helping Brian load and throw 82 bales of hay a day, delivering a new baby animal, collecting chicken eggs, working on the campsite or packing orders in my shop. Thank you Carhartt for letting us be a part of this!

"92 Unpredictable Days of Spring" History of Carhartt Commercial

Carhartt Mother's Day #AllHailMom!


Five Marys was featured in the

October 2018 issue of OPRAH Magazine!

As a “Where are you Going? feature of women leading interesting lives.

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An Interview with Erin at Floret

I’d love to introduce you to Mary Heffernan of Five Marys Farms, one of my all time favorite Instagram feeds (@fivemarysfarms) and one of the most brilliant and entrepreneurial farm “brands” I’ve ever seen. If you don’t already follow Five Marys, you absolutely must check out her account. You can also see Mary in the latest issue of Oprah Magazine!

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Through a beautiful blend of photographs and candid stories, Mary Heffernan shares her family’s farm and ranch life in Northern California’s Siskiyou County. Mary and her family raise 500 cattle, 600 sheep, 180 hogs, plus lots of chickens and sell “pastured everything” including premium pastured beef pork and lamb, honey and other farm products direct to consumers through their online shop, local farm store and new restaurant. Each month I order a box of Five Marys pasture-raised meat which is delivered right to our door and my family has enjoyed hundreds of amazing meals thanks to these passionate ranchers.

I asked Mary to share a little bit more about their farm and ranch with Floret readers. If you need a little dose of inspiration, be sure to read on! (And be sure to read through the end so you can also learn about one way you can help families affected by the California fires).


Erin: First tell readers a little bit more about yourself. How did you come to ranching in the first place?

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Mary: We decided to become full-time cattle ranchers four years ago but a year before then, if you’d told me we’d be living on a cattle ranch running a family ranching operation, I wouldn’t have believed it! I was born and raised in in the San Francisco Bay Area and went to college in Virginia, on track to go to medical school. I started tutoring local kids while studying for the MCAT after college and saw a huge need for a place where kids could come to do their homework, so I started my first real brick-and-mortar business called Academic Trainers in my hometown. It made me realize how much I loved small business and I had big ideas for more.

I met my husband a few years later and he was a young corporate attorney, working his way up in a big firm. After we had our first baby, Francie, we both wanted more autonomy for him so he left the firm and started his own small boutique practice – leasing office space above my tutoring business! We started working together, at least in the same building, and realized we wanted more. We started a few more brick-and-mortar businesses together including a farm-to-table restaurant geared toward high quality ingredients while being very family friendly (we had a playroom in the back!)

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It was then, as restaurateurs, that we started our search for the BEST quality beef we could find to serve our customers. After a lot of research, we knew what we wanted: Black Angus cattle with great genetics for marbling and meat quality, raised well, on grasses and barley and dry aged 21-28 days for an outstanding flavor and consistency. When we couldn’t find exactly what we wanted, we decided we would just do it ourselves.

We found this ranch in the mountains of Northern California and with some help from our brother-in-law, a 5th generation cattle rancher, we set up operations and jumped into ranch life while still trying to run our businesses in Silicon Valley. After spending the first eight weekends on the ranch after we bought it working hard with our girls to get things going and getting to know the ranching community, we knew we wanted to do this full time. We sold our Bay Area businesses and sold our house and jumped in. It’s a total change from the life we lived before, but we’ve never felt more satisfied and happy living on our land, raising animals and working together as a family.


Erin: Tell us about the ranch and your operation.

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Our ranch is in a town called Fort Jones (population 681) in the mountains of far northern California, almost to the Oregon border. We have 1800 acres of pasture land and mountain hill country. We raise Black Angus cattle, Navajo Churro sheep and heritage Berkshire hogs for market – meaning that we breed and raise them and ship the beef, pork and lamb to customers all over the country.

We knew if we were going to do this full time, without our restaurants to market the meat we raised, that we needed to find a new business model. We tried personally driving meat far distances to customers and we tried traveling to set up Farm Stands (our own version of a Farmers Market) to sell our meat – but we really wanted (and needed) to work on the ranch everyday and not leave. It’s been an ever evolving model but we are finally at a place where we can make this happen, in many ways thanks to the ability to share our story and our products with people all over the country using social media.


Erin: You ship pasture raised meat all over the country every week from your farm, bypassing the middle man and connecting directly with your customers, fans and followers in a really big way. Can you tell us more about your process and the special transport and box system that you use? Prior to ordering from you, I had no idea that meat could be shipped this way.

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Mary: We are so happy to be able to share our meats with families and customers all over the country, even Alaska and Hawaii! We are proud to be producing a super quality, premium product and the satisfaction of hearing from so many customers that it is the “best meat they’ve ever tasted” is pretty awesome.

We’d spent a full year researching and searching for the best way to ship meat. We wanted to use reusable materials and not bulky foam boxes. We wanted customers to be able to order any cut they wanted – from ground beef to a filet mignon – and not have to commit to a side of beef. We wanted to be able to ship all over the country.  

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After lots of trial and error we have a great system for getting meat to our customers. We use boxes that we brand ourselves with our actual cattle brand (at first to avoid having to pay for custom printed boxes, but it’s kind of become our signature now!) with biodegradable custom insulated liners. We include a block of dry ice in every box to keep the meet frozen until it arrives at our customers’ doorsteps. We use a few different shipping services depending on where the box is going to get it there as quickly as possible and most arrive overnight.

We have a website at www.shopfivemarys.com where you can choose any beef, pork and lamb cuts you’d like – either to stock up to feed your family (like ground beef, roasts and steaks for the month) or for a special occasion (like racks of lamb for Easter!)

Two years ago, when our shipping really ramped up, we opened a Farm Store in town where we have lots of space and a great set up to sell and ship our products (previously we had been shipping from the ranch) and have a nice little retail area for locals and walk-ins to shop too.


Erin: How did the ranch get it’s name?

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Mary: I am a Mary, named after my great grandmother Mary Regan. I come from a long line of strong women named Mary and we honored them in naming our daughters, MaryFrances, MaryMarjorie, MaryJane and MaryTeresa. We honestly didn’t think we’d have all girls or ever planned on all Marys – but once we named Francie and Maisie (they all go by nicknames) – we had to keep it going! My husband came up with the name “Five Marys” when we bought the ranch and decided to market our own ranch raised meats and products.

We get a lot of funny comments about naming all of our girls Mary :) but I think my girls love feeling like they are a part of something bigger and sure helps people remember us!


Erin: One of the most inspiring things is watching your four girls help on the ranch. You wrote a great e-book about what you’ve learned about raising kids in the country. Can you share a little more about the book?

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Mary: My girls are extremely independent, resourceful and helpful on the ranch – but I can’t take credit for it. Moving to the ranch and jumping in to raise multiple species of animals and growing our own hay and running a family business – forced us to rely on them to help. We went from a pretty cushy life in the suburbs and taking care of their needs for them (like filling sippy cups and helping them get dressed!) to needing them to step up and help us feed cows off the back of a feed truck or make their own dinner while Brian and I were delivering a newborn calf in distress. They were young when we moved here – all 6 years old and under but I realized by necessity they were so much more capable than I had given them credit for. They were totally capable of doing the laundry and helping each other get up and get dressed for school. They could take care of a sick newborn lamb and drive a 4-wheeler to feed the horses. I learned so much by watching them blossom and grow in this newfound independence, with satisfaction and drive to do more in them as a result.

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I was so inspired by the changes in our family that I wrote an ebook called “They Can Do It. What I Learned About Raising Kids by Moving to the Country.” It tells our story, how we made the decision to totally switch paths from a busy suburban life in Silicon Valley, the land of opportunity and amenities, to become cattle ranchers in a rural small town and recreate our livelihood. We moved from a big, beautiful home we’d worked so hard for – to a 780 square foot ranch cabin where my girls all shared a bed for the first year and a woodstove is our only source of heat. It was an adjustment – but it honestly feels like we are exactly where we are supposed to be and I’ve never been happier living in a tiny house and working hard on our land everyday with my husband and my girls.

Book Link: https://fivemarysfarms.squarespace.com/recipebook/they-can-do-it-1


Erin: In addition to all of your pasture raised everything, you’ve expanded to include retreats on the ranch and a new restaurant. I’d love to be able to have a Floret planning retreat there some day! Can you share with readers a little more about these new endeavors? 

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Mary: It’s important to us to share what we do and tell our story. There is so much beauty on our ranch and we love entertaining guests to share it – but our little house isn’t the easiest to host! We built a place on our ranch to bring guests to get a taste of ranch life for a few nights – with tent cabins and outdoor showers (with great water pressure and tons of hot water – we all prefer to go up there to shower!) and an awesome outdoor kitchen. We invite guests every summer for “Cooking & Cocktails” retreats to spend three days and two nights on the ranch – waking up to do morning chores with us on the four-wheelers, camp breakfast and coffee over the wood fired stove, cooking lessons, cocktail making and so much more!

Then last year (after swearing we’d never go back to restaurant ownership!) we bought the historic bar and restaurant in town and re-vamped it to open Five Marys Burgerhouse, serving all of our own meats to our local community as well as guests from near and far who come to visit. Restaurants are so much work, but we love the community aspect of doing it in a small town. We have local live music every Friday night and it’s like opening up our living room to a small town – everybody shows up and they are so appreciative for good food and a great atmosphere, it’s a lot of fun for us!

It’s also been a great landing spot for a lot of visitors from all over the country (and the world!) who come to visit Five Marys. This is always so humbling for us to meet people who travel distances to come here! We just opened a Guesthouse in town too for a cozy place for visitors to stay – it’s a 1850’s craftsman home right down the street from the Burgerhouse with beautiful gardens and fruit trees and a little berry patch. It’s a great spot to host guests, especially in the winter when it’s a little too cold at Camp!


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Erin: We have a lot of budding and established farmers and small business owners that read the Floret blog and so many of them struggle with the “selling” part of business. We often talk about being the face of your business and instead of “selling” to focus on connecting with your customers by telling your story. You have done an exceptional job of taking us all along for the ride. Can you share any words of wisdom when it comes to marketing in an authentic way?

Mary: I feel very fortunate to be able to market and run a thriving business from a rural town, but thanks to the internet and social media (specifically Instagram) it makes it doable and a lot of fun. I totally agree that telling your story is the most important and valuable way to market your business or your brand.

These days there are so many easy avenues to shop and so many products out there. People want more. They want to KNOW their farmer or their rancher or their florist. I think the pendulum is swinging back to the “good old days” when you knew these people and they lived right down the road. You would see your neighbor, the rancher, out there feeding his cows twice a day and helping a momma cow in labor – and on Sunday when he opened his farm stand to sell his products, you’d stop to shop feeling good about knowing where you food came from and knowing it was high quality and well taken care of since you saw him out there working everyday as you drove by. That just isn’t geographically as common now – but thanks to social media, you can KNOW your farmer or rancher or florist by watching them share their days and feeling like you know them! It’s pretty cool and a very effective way to share your product and build a successful business.

I’ve been mentoring a few other ranchers on getting their product to customers, shipping meats or ranch products and building a business in the agricultural arena – so I’ve been compiling an e-course on everything I’ve learned and ways to market your product, service or brand by telling your story, using social media and building a successful, profitable business. It’s called “YOU CAN DO IT. Small Business from Scratch” and I am super excited to launch this soon! I am so passionate about small business and entrepreneurship – and so thankful I get to do this even living in a rural area. I can’t wait to share this part of my story with others and help them do the same.


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Erin: Thank you so much, Mary, for taking the time to share your story with Floret readers. I’m super inspired by what you are doing and I’m serious when I say I want to come visit someday soon and have a Floret planning retreat at your ranch! Until then, we’ll all enjoy following your adventures online. 

Thank you for the interview Erin - you are one of the women in business I admire the most and am so lucky to call you a mentor!

-Mary



California Bountiful Farm Bureau Magazine: "High Five!"

Read about Five Marys in the California Farm Bureau magazine - CA Bountiful! "High Five!"

- As the sun begins to make its descent in the Siskiyou County sky, Brian Heffernan stacks bales of hay onto the back of his flatbed truck.

Hurrying to beat the impending sunset, Heffernan builds a tower of sweet-smelling bales for the cows mooing in anticipation. He checks the sun over his shoulder, noting it has dipped below the snow-dusted mountains. But just as he starts his truck, a young girl clad in pink pants and a purple jacket bursts out of the ranch's cabin and heads his way.

Heffernan pauses and waits for daughter Maisie to run the 100 or so yards from the house and jump in the seat next to him. Then the two set off to make the dinner drops—together.

Such is life for Heffernan and his five Marys: his wife, Mary, and his four daughters, also all named Mary. MaryFrances, 9, goes by Francie; MaryMarjorie, or Maisie, is 8; MaryJane, nicknamed JJ, is 6; and MaryTeresa, a preschooler, is lovingly referred to as Tiny or Tessa.

The family makes their home on the historic Sharps Gulch Ranch in the Scott Valley. Their livelihood is ranching: The Heffernans raise Angus beef cattle, heritage hogs, Navajo-Churro sheep and egg-laying chickens.

From sunup to sundown, Brian cares for the animals and the ranch. His wife oversees sales and marketing of their meat under the family's Five Marys Farms brand, which they sell online, and his daughters bottle-feed lambs, collect eggs, throw hay for cows and help corral wayward hogs that break through fences.

"We're a really strong unit of teamwork," Mary said. "It's all six of us working together to take care of each other and take care of our animals."

And though this bucolic lifestyle seems like second nature for the Heffernans, it's more like a second chapter for the family.


Mary and Brian Heffernan and their daughters all work together on their ranch, raising beef cattle, lambs, chickens for eggs, hogs and turkeys.

From hustle to home

When Brian and Mary first met, he worked as an attorney for a large law firm and she ran a successful tutoring business. They made a home in the Bay Area, starting their family of Marys.

Seeing a gap in family-focused dining options, the couple ventured into the restaurant business, opening two eateries in Los Altos. One featured American fare and the unique concept of a family playroom: Parents could drop off their children in a supervised space and still have quiet table service. The other was a juice and espresso bar, just down the street.

As restaurateurs, the Heffernans logged many hours in the kitchens of their restaurants, fostering a curiosity and passion for California-grown food.

"We always looked for local farms where we could source from," Mary said. "We had some pretty fantastic chefs working for and with us, and we began to learn about different meats and what makes great meat. We found what we loved was beef raised with a barley finish that was dry-aged 28 days. But when we sought out beef from small farms to buy, we couldn't find enough of it in a scale to support the restaurant."

So the Heffernans decided to raise the beef themselves. For many, the leap from suburban to farm life may seem unlikely. But for both Brian and Mary, ranching was a return to their roots. Brian's great-great-grandfather emigrated from Germany and began farming sugar beets in Ventura County in the late 1800s. His dad farmed in the Imperial Valley and Tehama County. Mary's family farmed in the Watsonville area for five generations.

In late 2013, the Heffernans found and bought their land, hoping to be both restaurant owners and ranchers, driving north to the cows on the weekends. The wide-open spaces, the slower pace of life and the opportunity to live and work closely as a family pulled the Heffernans to the ranch more and more. They sold their restaurants and, by mid-2014, had made Fort Jones their full-time home.


Whether checking on the cattle with their father, above, bottle-feeding a lamb or tending to newly hatched chicks, the Heffernan girls don't hesitate to get hands-on.

Sharing their story

Settling into a rural town of about 800 people brought plenty of changes.

Mary stopped using a hair dryer, she acknowledged with a laugh. The girls traded matching dresses and bows in their hair for mud-caked boots. Their days start earlier and end later—they fix frozen water pipes, help lambs give birth at 5 a.m. and bottle-feed calves that need extra attention.

Though their tasks are routine, and likely no different than those on most California ranches, the Heffernans accomplish them all together: Mom, Dad and four little Marys.

Mary began documenting this new life on social media for family and friends to see. Soon her followers on Instagram grew to 30,000, with some as far as Great Britain. She now posts a half-dozen photos or videos a day, telling the Five Marys story—everything from bath time for the girls to helping an animal give birth. They say they've connected more strongly as a family, and in turn are connecting the rest of the world to their family.

It's this peek behind the scenes into daily ranch life through social media that the Heffernans believe has helped them build such a strong customer base.

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"A big part of why people want our meat is that we are telling them our story, the day-to-day of what we are doing," Brian said. "We have total transparency and share everything—all the ups and downs of farming. What people see is, there may be downs, but we're always focused on taking care of our animals."

Mary said customers ask her questions in real time on the live feeds and have even sent hand-me-down rubber boots to the girls.


Social media has been an avenue for the Heffernans to give customers and fans a glimpse into their daily lives. The ranch has more than 30,000 followers on Instagram and Mary Heffernan often shares live videos of the family completing evening chores.

"With social media, I feel so connected to what we're doing and see so many opportunities to reach new people and tell our story and connect with them," she said. "They see an inside view of our lives and we get to know them too."

When Brian recently found a newborn lamb struggling to survive at 5:45 a.m. while making his routine feeding rounds, he scooped up the animal and brought it inside to be tended by Francie, who jumped out of bed and into action. The family documented Francie warming the lamb by the fire and bottle-feeding it to bring it strength. It didn't make it, but stories like these resonate with customers such as Bay Area resident Jeannette Ring.

Ring orders about 30 pounds of meat once a month from Five Marys and fills her refrigerator with the Heffernans' ground beef, lamb and turkey.

The convenience of having a box of high-quality meat on her doorstep every month is ideal, Ring said, but the story behind the meat—the handwritten thank-you notes and drawings from the girls in every package, the burning of the Five Marys brand on every box packed by Mary herself, the connection to the farm—is what keeps her supporting the family business.

"Knowing that the girls are out there and out helping, it's wonderful to see. Knowing the hard work that they all put into it makes me appreciate what we buy from them even more," Ring said. "It helps me to slow down in the kitchen and become more mindful with how I cook and prepare food. They've done the best on their end. I want to make sure I'm doing the best on mine."

Though the daily ranching routine has linked the first-time farmers to their customers and social media followers, farming has forged the deepest bond among members of their own family.

"It's not easy. It's really hard work," Brian said. "But we get to do it together. The good and bad, we're tackling them head-on as a family. It's not as romantic as a lot of people envision, but ranching is also the greatest life experience we can have for our family."

A focus on the whole

Fans swear by the taste of pasture-raised beef, pork and lamb from Five Marys Farms. But the family is committed to more than producing popular cuts with great flavor. Their whole-animal approach to butchery means wasting as little as possible.

"We love our animals and care for them so much," Mary Heffernan said. "We want to make sure we're continuing to take care in finding ways that we're best utilizing all that they provide."

The family sells sheepskin pelts from their Navajo-Churro sheep, which have long, soft wool. After the sheep are harvested, the couple collect the pelts, clean them on the ranch and then have them cleaned further and salted to preserve the hide before the journey to a Quakertown, Pa., tannery. The pelts spend six months at the tannery and then travel back to the ranch, where Mary photographs them and puts them on the Five Marys website to sell as rugs or throws.

The Heffernans also sell bones for customers to make bone broth, as well as offal, or nutrient-dense beef and lamb organs such as kidneys and liver, for use in inventive dishes to broaden their customers' culinary skills.

The Five Marys Story : By Verizon

 

Verizon Story

By: Jason Small

Their four daughters are sound asleep in the back of the car. Mary is having a life-changing conversation with her husband, Brian. 

“Why do we keep going back and forth when we really want to be on the ranch? It feels like we are leaving home,” says Mary. Her question was semi-rhetorical, because they both knew they felt the same way.  But there was so much to consider.

It’s a six hour drive each way from Silicon Valley to their ranch in Northern California. This is their eighth consecutive weekend making the trip as they drive back from their 1,800 acre farm. They successfully run nine small businesses in The Valley that cater to young families in everything from food and entertainment to retail. Initially, the farm was intended as a path to sourcing better meat for their restaurants but it was becoming much more for their family.

It’s a good thing it’s a six hour drive because they had a lot to cover. Their life in The Valley includes the home they dreamed of and worked so hard for… they have everything they thought they needed in their cushy suburban life. 

In town, they can walk between their businesses and have lunch together while they work off laptops. They are enjoying booming businesses as 15 years of hard work pays off. Their social lives are full of friends, birthdays and family gatherings.

Why do we keep going back and forth when we really want to be on the ranch? It feels like we are leaving home.

They have it all. But they inherently know  this  can’t be it, something is still missing and it’s  becoming dramatically more evident as they spend each weekend at the ranch.

So at the end of the six hour drive they decide to call their realtor to start talking to her about selling their house. It’s a big decision. It’s something that feels so right. Yet, Mary’s thoughts in the coming months are understandably conflicted.

“You’ll feel so isolated,” some tell her. Others remark at how cold the winters will feel. After such a great social life in The Valley, will they feel alone?

Disconnected? What about their four sweet young daughters? All four are between the fragile ages of one and six. Is this the right thing for them? 

The important stuff…isn’t stuff

They sell eight of nine businesses for a whole new life in Northern California.

While preparing for the move, Brian surveys the land to see where there is enough water to support livestock. Mary is more concerned about bars of service and staying connected. They have to make a business out of this. Mary knows she needs to market online and grow a national audience for the brand. Then, there is staying in touch with friends and family now that they live so far away.

They pack up everything they thought was important and take it with them…and much of it now sits behind the house in big storage containers.

“What we thought would be important to us, just isn’t,” Mary shares.

In fact, Mary’s found a lot of other significant changes too. From family and friends’ relationships, to a stronger perspective on how they want to use technology and even learning how much more her children are capable of doing.

More so than anything else, what Mary discovers is a whole new level of connection with Brian and their four daughters.

That decision to move was three years ago. 

What we thought would be important to us, just isn’t.

 

The visit

As I pull in to the town of Fort Jones, CA the sun is bright and the wind is light as I close the car door. I look up and down the small quaint street. Mom and pop shops line the road and just a few short steps away is the storefront to Five Mary’s Farms. All four of their daughters are named Mary, after a strong Catholic tradition on both sides of the family and a lack of boys with each new addition created the perfect scenario for it to happen.

I’m here because Mary reached out to Verizon. She wanted to share some of her story. More specifically, she wanted us to know how meaningful staying connected has been and how genuinely grateful she was for the ability to not only use her phone across her property in this rural area but to use GizmoPal to track her daughters and keep them safe.

I had to go see it first-hand and find out why anyone would make this transition. How could someone ‘disconnect’ from one world and move to another that was so completely different from the life they were leading? More importantly, I wanted to find out how it’s going and if there’s anything Mary can share that would help others considering a big life-change.

“Hi Jason, I’m Mary. It’s so nice to meet you,” Mary smiles and welcomes me as I walk in to the well-decorated shop. She’s packing some of the 80-100 boxes they ship weekly. Their youngest ‘Mary,’ nicknamed Tiny Tess, greets me with the cutest smile in her little white dress. Each Mary has a nickname to keep things easier, and all were named after their grandmother.

We head out to the ranch, just a few minutes away.

Mary, Mary, Mary, Mary, Mary and…Brian

Brian swings out on a 4x4 quad kicking up a dust cloud as we pull up to the ranch. He’s racing across the ranch to go check on an animal that looks like it needs help.

Meanwhile, I meet all of the other ‘Mary’s’ who are ridiculously well-behaved, well-spoken and almost too cute to be believable. Brian comes back from checking on the animal. His flannel shirt, salt and pepper beard and kind welcome makes it seem like he’s been here all his life. You’d never guess he was a former attorney in Silicon Valley meeting him here.

I spend the rest of the day learning about the lifestyle changes from Brian and Mary and how they’ve learned from it. Including how Mary feels technology plays such a critical role in their ability to transition and sustain a great life here.

Relationships, technology, four daughters and 1,800 acres

This vast ranch is a daily job of 14-16 hours. Brian’s day starts at 4:45 am and includes almost anything because he’s constantly maintaining equipment, managing hundreds of animals and overseeing resources across the ranch.

“What is most important to us is working together as a family to take care of our animals and to put really good food on people's tables,” Brian shares.

Mary ensures the business is running smoothly, while also helping manage the day-to-day farm operations. She’s also constantly marketing and sharing content on their Facebook and Instagram pages — amassing an engaged following across the country.

They both do all of this, while spending more time with their daughters each day than ever before.

 

Mary and the kids gather eggs, feed animals and a host of other chores around the ranch in a family-based work effort.

“I wondered how isolated we might feel. What I realized is that many of the social and family events we used to go to were great, but we discovered that out here the relationships are need-based. Instead of just catching-up with family and friends, you are doing something to help one another. As a result, the relationships become deeply connected.”

Mary continues, “I knew I wanted to stay in close touch with my family and friends even though we were all the way out here. Social media allows me to do that with them and it also allows us to continue to build our business.”

I wondered how much the girls use technology and how life on a ranch changes that. 

 

FIVE MARYS FARMS " DAY IN THE LIFE VIDEO"

A Film by Joy Prouty - www.wildflowersphotos.com © Wildflowers Photography 2016 © Harvest Sessions. 24 hours of real life. Music: Drew Holcomb and the Neighbors: 'What Would I Do Without You' licensed through The Music Bed