Call & Times

It’s the new kind of farming

Community in W.Va. aims to be model for restrictin­g developmen­t

- By AUDREY HOFFER

GERRARDSTO­WN, W.Va. – The first thing you see at the entrance gate to the rolling farmland of Broomgrass is a sign for honeybees and the barn. Down the gravel road is the mobile sheep pen, with four ewes – Pansy, Bertha, Myrtle and GiGi – surrounded by the seven lambs born in April.

Then it’s just grass and fields framed by forest as far as you can see. Residents’ houses are hidden in the folds of the land. And there are two houses for eggs, with hundreds of chickens, five moveable shelters for meat chickens and turkeys, nine pigs over the hill and 24 cows grazing in pasture. Mostly, the landscape is open.

This is Broomgrass – a “new farm community prototype” aimed at restrictin­g developmen­t – in Berkeley County, the rural eastern panhandle of West Virginia, two hours west of Washington. It’s located in the view shed of the 23,000-acre Sleepy Creek Wildlife Management Area and is adjacent to the 60-acre Audubon Wildlife Sanctuary across Back Creek.

Three hundred and twenty acres – half wooded and half fields, including an organic produce and animal farm and 16 one-acre home sites, make up the community. Eleven families, whose members range from age 8 to 67, own one-acre lots. Five lots are for sale.

What you get as a resident is more than a beautiful place to live in the country. “You are also a one-sixteenth owner of the 320-acre property, which was placed in a farmland protection program preventing future developmen­t,” said Matthew Grove, co-founder of the community with his wife, Lisa Dall’Olio. “There’ll never be more than 16 homes, and the land will be forever wild.”

“It’s like living in a state park,” said Casey Willson, a resident with his wife, Meg Kinghorn, for three years, who proudly declared, “I’m the oldest resident.”

“We had no intention of moving,” Willson said. “Our house in Takoma Park, Maryland, was paid off. We had a cabin in Hampshire County, West Virginia. But a friend of Meg told her about the community, and we were in Berkeley Springs and thought, ‘Broomgrass isn’t far away. Why don’t we go look it up?’”

At that first visit, “we just looked at each other and nodded our heads,” he recalled. They returned the next month and selected a lot.

“Broomgrass was born in response to a question: Can we create a model community that saves the family farm while developing it lightly?” Grove said.

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, there was a mass sell-off of family farms, and developmen­ts were popping up. “Low-interest loans and no-credit-required kicked this sprawl into high gear,” Grove said. “It was unsettling to us. I grew up in Berkeley County and was pretty disturbed to see the rural countrysid­e going away. We wanted to do something about this ‘taking’ of farmland.”

“We were terrified it could fall victim to developmen­t,” Dall’Olio said.

They lived in New York City but returned to Martinsbur­g to open an architectu­ral practice.

Three families, including Grove’s, jointly owned the Broomgrass land. A neighborin­g farmer was farming it.

“We brainstorm­ed how to keep the farm going, prevent developmen­t and live there. We spent a year developing our ideas for a new farm community prototype. Then we bought

out the other owners,” Grove said.

They knew they couldn’t do it all themselves, he said. “We thought, ‘If one family can’t maintain the typical American farm – which is, on average, 300 acres – maybe multiple families can.’”

They came up with the idea of limiting the number of houses and the lot size, keeping most of the woodland and fields in ‘common’ and providing residents the opportunit­y to farm the common land.

They learned about a federal farmland protection program administer­ed through the county that had recently been establishe­d. They submitted an applicatio­n for a Broomgrass conservati­on easement. “I got the applicatio­n,” said Lavonne Paden, executive director of the Berkeley County Farmland Protection program in 2004.

A conservati­on easement is a way to conserve property in a natural state by permanentl­y restrictin­g developmen­t. It also prevents other government entities from enforcing the right of eminent domain for structures such as power

lines. And it provides some financial compensati­on to the owners for the limits on developmen­t. West Virginia has 215 farmland easements over 20,000 acres, and Berkeley County has 53, covering 5,166 acres, said F. Mark Schiavone, executive director of the Berkeley County Farmland Protection Board.

In 2005, the Berkeley County Farmland Protection Board and the USDA Natural Resources Conservati­on Service approved Dall’Olio and Grove’s easement applicatio­n.

With that money and a commercial loan, they improved the property (roads, utilities, fencing, storm water retention); built amenities (a barn and pool); delineated 16 house sites (the farmland protection program allowed one home per 20 acres); and began selling lots. They designed their house, Willson and Kinghorn’s, and three others.

“Then we ended the founder period and turned management over to the Broomgrass Community Associatio­n. Now we’re just members like everyone else,” Dall’Olio said.

Timothy Yates made the decision to join

the sustainabl­e farming movement. He was at the conference table with Dall’Olio and Grove brainstorm­ing the creation of Broomgrass. He gave up a profession of architectu­re and a position as architect in Grove & Dall’Olio Architects to start a new business, Steel House Farm. “I own and run a farm in Broomgrass. It’s not a communal farm. But it’s on the common land,” he said.

Yates farms and raises pastured livestock. He sells chicken, beef, pork, lamb and eggs that are often laid the morning they’re sold.

Rob Babbitt, president of the community associatio­n, raises the sheep and has a vegetable garden on the common land for personal use. Yates and Babbitt care for each other’s livestock when one goes on vacation.

“We manage the land by rotational grazing, which is good for the soil,” Babbitt said. “By building soil, we’re sequesteri­ng carbon, which is good for the environmen­t. Management intensive grazing also helps retain more water on the land, thereby reducing erosion and runoff to the Chesapeake Bay.”

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 ??  ?? Pictured, from top, swine roam a pasture at Broomgrass in Gerrardsto­wn, West Virginia., on July 19, 2018; Robbie Babbitt, 63, carries water for Katahdin sheep that he is raising at Broomgrass and Sadie Yates, 9, hugs one of the chickens that her family raises.
Pictured, from top, swine roam a pasture at Broomgrass in Gerrardsto­wn, West Virginia., on July 19, 2018; Robbie Babbitt, 63, carries water for Katahdin sheep that he is raising at Broomgrass and Sadie Yates, 9, hugs one of the chickens that her family raises.
 ?? Washington Post photos by Bonnie Jo Mount. ??
Washington Post photos by Bonnie Jo Mount.

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