NZ Lifestyle Block

Food with a view Meet a couple running an organic market garden with a million dollar view

Skye Macfarlane and Jed Tweedie ditched life in the middle of Auckland City for a remote block, self-employment, and an organic market garden with a million dollar view.

- Words Nadene Hall

WHO: Skye Macfarlane & Jed Tweedie WHAT: Vern Paddock Project & FredFred Small Human Food WHERE: Mihiwaka, 26km north-east of Dunedin LAND: 11ha (27 acres) WEB: @vernpaddoc­kprojectnz www.fredfredor­ganics.com

The Vern Paddock Project is perched on a ridge on a windswept hill looking out over Otago Harbour. It has possibly the best view of any certified organic market garden in NZ. It's home to naturopath Skye Macfarlane, her husband Jed Tweedie, and son Fred. We're speaking with Skye two days before Jed is due to leave his job as an engineer for Fisher & Paykel.

“He's going to be a full-time farmer, and I'm so excited for him. We've been working on this coming up two years – it's taken that long to build up everything.”

Jed grows and sells microgreen­s and organic produce to cafés, restaurant­s, supermarke­ts, greengroce­rs, and organic stores around Dunedin.

“Thursday night, we're processing microgreen­s and we finish at 11.30pm," says Skye. "Friday, we're up at 5.30am picking lettuce. It's some pretty big days, so I'm hoping this means we'll get back a little time at the weekends, but I'm probably kidding myself.”

The couple spent five years living in Auckland while Skye did a degree in naturopath­y and then worked in the health industry.

“Jed isn't a city person, and unbeknown to me, he'd been looking on TradeMe and found this place. I was like, ‘sure, we can live in the country,' not thinking it would ever happen.”

Four years later, she's working for Wild Dispensary, grows, produces, and sells a herbal tea range, and runs a baby food business named in honour of her son.

FredFred Small Human Food came about when Skye started Fred on solids. She couldn't find anything with an

emphasis on nutrient-dense ingredient­s.

“When I looked at what was on the supermarke­t shelf, the products were absolutely amazing for convenienc­e, but none had fats for brain health, gut developmen­t, or for fullness.

"And most baby food has a lot of fruit in it, which gives sweetness as that first taste preference.”

Her vegetable-based range is designed to get a baby’s palette used to a variety of flavours, including bitter. They’re sold frozen in resealable packs in local organic stores and will soon be in her local supermarke­t. A couple of cafés also have it on their ‘baby’ menus.

The move to the country and selfemploy­ment means Fred has the life his parents dreamed of for him, and themselves.

“Fred has grown up with a whole lot of space and land. If we were still in Auckland, he would have missed out on this opportunit­y." •

In his spare time, Jed turned a paddock on their block into a BioGro certified organic market garden. He now works on it full-time using regenerati­ve agricultur­e systems, and is planning to make all the compost the garden needs. The couple has also recently added a processing room for their produce and a new greenhouse.

"Fred runs around the fields, he snacks on kale, he's a real farm kid."

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