Country ZEST & Style Summer 2022 Edition

Page 12

Fighting Food Insecurity in Loudoun One Acre at a Time Dana Melby out on the farm near Gilberts Corner By Peyton Tochterman

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rowing up in Frederick County, Virginia, surrounded by orchards and generational farms, Dana Melby fell in love with horticulture at an early age. A self-described “plant nerd,” Melby wasn’t born into a farming family and often wondered how people became farmers, and she was unsure if that life was a possibility. Now, years later, after earning a Bachelors in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology from the University of Colorado and a Masters in International Agriculture at Oklahoma State, she’s the farm manager at The Community Farm at Roundabout Meadows. It’s an independent non-profit donor-supported organization located at Gilbert’s Corner, where she oversees the day-to-day operations. Acquired by the Piedmont Environmental Council (PEC) in 2013 before it could be developed into “gas stations, strip malls, and housing developments,” The Community Farm has one purpose: to donate 100 percent of food grown to Loudon Hunger Relief.

limited access to healthy food. The consequences can be stark for these children, as their development, ability to learn and overall health are directly related to the quality of their diet. PEC President Chris Miller said, “The notion that there are around 10,000 children in Loudoun facing a chronic lack of access to sufficient nutritious food is troubling, both as a parent and as someone who knows the bounty that Loudoun County has to offer.” Melby is only interested in providing the highest quality and freshest fruits and vegetables, including potatoes, tomatoes, squash, and melons. “We want our families that get our food to get the same fresh and local produce that you get when you go to the farmers market. We never send seconds.” “And they deliver on that,” said Mary Peterson, a volunteer with the farm since its inception in 2018. She’s one of over 750 volunteers who donated over 1,600 hours of their time to the farm. A Kentucky native who grew up on a farm and moved to Northern Virginia 30 years ago, Peterson said her work there is rewarding and inspiring.

This goodwill has not come without its hardships. Melby recalled when she joined PEC in 2018 and helped develop a long-term plan for the land. “There were invasive species everywhere,” she said. “It took me an hour to walk a fence line. Now I can walk it in ten minutes….I got here, and there was a drilled well, but no power, a partial driveway, and the soil was not ready.” Ever the optimist, Melby saw an overgrown blank canvas. “I’m bullheaded, and farming takes blood, sweat, and tears,” she said. “So that’s what we gave. You don’t know the soil until you work with it. And so, we did.” They built barns, bought tractors, got power run to the buildings, and built their volunteer base. “The passion and interest from our community has been there,” she said. “We have volunteers living in a condo in Ashburn but grew up on a farm in Illinois, and they want to be out here to help preserve and work the land. They get it.” Volunteers also come from local schools.

Despite Loudoun’s reputation as a wealthy community, a surprising number of children in the county — one in ten — live in households with

“I have taken my three grandsons (she has ten grandchildren in all), and we have cut potatoes for seed potatoes, planted onions, harvested cabbage, cucumbers, squash, and peppers, and we wash and pack the food in bags for families of four. My family gets to help not just protect the land, but we get the opportunity to contribute thousands of pounds of food to the people who live with food insecurity in our community. The people at The Community Farm are good stewards of the land and good stewards of produce.”

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MIDDLEBURG SUSTAINABLE COMMITTEE| Summer 2022

Sitting on 142 acres with only one acre of production, their first growing season in 2019 yielded 5,000 pounds of produce. This past year, because of Covid and the need to support more families with food insecurity, the farm has generated 50,000 pounds of food on eight acres.

“Just the other day, we had thirty first-graders come to volunteer, and I asked them, ‘who wants to plant one hundred trees?’ Seconds later, they excitedly ran down the hill to where we were planting. Farming can be frustrating, but those kids’ enthusiasm makes it all worth it. “If we inspire one kid to see that you can grow up and be a farmer and not necessarily have to own the land to succeed, then it’s just another win.”


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LETTER from PARIS: Someone’s in the Kitchen with Roma, Just Not John

6min
page 70

DOC WEEK MIDDLEBURG

2min
page 69

Country ZEST & Style Summer 2022 Edition

1min
page 68

Coming of Age With Room Service Please

3min
page 67

Art of the Piedmont

1min
page 66

A Modern Link to Early 1900s Farming

4min
page 65

Tales from The Hunt Field: Melvin Poe and the Big Red Fox

3min
page 64

Nutrition That Makes Great Sense for Horses

3min
page 63

Pooch Perfect at Four Leaf Clover Bakery

3min
page 62

LOSING A LOCAL LEGEND

6min
pages 60-61

HORSEY NEWS & NOTES

1min
page 59

A Fargis Golden Rule: The Horse Comes First

5min
page 58

Middleburg Horseman Helps Jockey Make Kentucky Derby History

3min
page 57

Sporting Pursuits

1min
page 56

A Day in the Life at Upperville 2021

2min
page 54

Country ZEST & Style Summer 2022 Edition

4min
pages 52-53

VINEYARD VIEW: Melanie Natoli Makes Wine, and History

4min
page 51

Warrenton Sports a Glorious New Restaurant

3min
page 50

Perspectives on Childhood, Education and Parenting: That Sixth Sense May Not Be What You Think

3min
page 49

A One-Stop Shop at Upperville Farm and Feed

3min
page 48

Everyone Just Tickled About Pickleball

3min
page 47

Middleburg’s Mount Defiance: A Battle in Your Backyard

3min
page 46

PROPERTY Writes: A Whitewood Road Renovation for The Ages

2min
page 45

MODERN FINANCE: A Not So Stable Stablecoin

3min
page 44

PAMPER PERFECT PLACE FOR THE BRIDE

4min
page 43

90 Percent Half-True, a collection of short stories by Keith Patterson

2min
page 42

Laurie Crofford: Managing a Park for All People

3min
page 41

HERE & THERE

1min
page 40

Back in Middleburg and Always Giving Back

3min
page 39

Matt Blunt: From A Missouri Governor's Mansion to Middleburg

4min
page 38

Some Enchanted Evening: Windy Hill Gala 2022 - Subtle and Creative

2min
pages 36-37

PINK IS THE COLOR OF THE DAY

1min
page 35

David Mars is Salamander Resort’s New General Manager

3min
page 34

Middleburg Safeway Celebrates

4min
page 32

From Aldie to Hamilton, a New Home for Mattingly’s

3min
page 31

Cherishing the Bull Run Mountains

3min
page 30

The Hill School: A Day at the Races

1min
page 29

A Pinch of Time Can Help Save the Day

3min
page 28

A Golden Opportunity Once in Fauquier County

5min
pages 26-27

For Sandy Danielson, It’s All About the Art

3min
page 24

Singing the Praises of a Reluctant Coal Miner’s Daughter

2min
page 23

THIS & THAT

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page 22

A Mysterious Writer Loves Her Virginia Wine

2min
page 21

Middleburg Spring Races at Glenwood Park

1min
page 19

Donna Devadas: It’s All Memorable

4min
pages 16-17

GOING FOR THE GOLD

1min
page 14

Fighting Food Insecurity in Loudoun One Acre at a Time

4min
page 12

For Lt. Shaun Jones, The Beat Goes On

3min
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Fox & Pheasant Expands Exponentially

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page 10

Some Movie Magic Created at Hill and Foxcroft

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A Special Delivery for the Middleburg Post Office: 20118

3min
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Out in Africa: On Behalf of Man and Beast

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FLOWER POWER ON DISPLAY

3min
page 4

SWAN DIVE

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Middleburg Horseman Helps Jockey Make Kentucky Derby History

3min
page 57

For Jim Donegan: A Lifelong Love Affair With Trees

4min
pages 52-53
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