A loan helped a family-scale up their mealworm farm to help fill the high demand for insect protein in Arkansas.


Bryan's story

We’ve been gardening together since before we were married. We started with small pots of tomatoes and moved on to small plots of beans and wide swaths of pollinator flowers. Over the years we became more and more interested in building healthy soil and growing food as a way to provide a more just future for our communities. Our research in food production—and concerns about access to dependable food forces—led Meredith to begin thinking about insects as a form of accessible protein. We quickly learned that there was a whole world of insect farming out there! Unlike chicken or cattle farms, which require a large amount of land to become profitable, insect farms are small and create a highly marketable by-product that isn’t toxic in large amounts. It’s called frass and can transform even red clay into healthy dirt. We didn’t set out to become insect farmers. But we did set out to find ways to grow food futures. And we think we have found one solution of which we can be a part.


This loan is special because:

It helps this business continue to grow.



Loan details


About Sulphur Springs Truck Patch

Industry: Agriculture
Years in operation: 3 years - 5 years
Website: truck-patch.com

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Loan details