A loan helped a rural woman farmer grow her rooted-in-passion market farm!


Emily's story

My journey in agriculture began at the farmer's market. I landed my first paid farming job at nineteen, working for an organic farm. Each market day started before sunrise - loading produce into a box truck, making the two-hour drive, and spending the day selling fresh vegetables. The perks were amazing: I could trade produce, take home all the vegetables I wanted, and meet such wonderful people. After my previous job as a casino server in a smoky room, the farm's open air and vibrant life felt like freedom.

This first taste of farming shaped my entire career path. I've worked across California, Oregon, and even New Zealand, experiencing everything from small volunteer operations to large export farms. In 2015, I deepened my knowledge through a permaculture design course and earned an associate degree in science from Central Oregon Community College, combining practical experience with formal education.
My path then led to landscape gardening, where I mastered irrigation systems. But something was missing - I wanted to grow food, not just ornamental plants. This revelation took me to New Zealand's small farms and eventually to Joseph, Oregon, where I managed the Minam River Lodge garden for three years. Now, I have started my farm, Wallowa Wild, putting down deep roots in a place that has become my identity through its mountain culture and unique landscape.

Looking back, I can't even remember when I started gardening with my family, but that early exposure planted a seed that grew into more than just a career. Farming became my way of life. This way of life continues because I find satisfaction in working in the dirt for long hours outside, waking up at 5 am to get the best of the day, obsessively researching plant knowledge, observing the natural world, and constantly learning and striving to grow the best food. Farming provides so many opportunities, not just fiscal or lifestyle, but it also allows me to connect with the environment directly and cater to its needs too. This reciprocity is constant and can always be captured if observed. For example, this irrigation system that the Kiva loan will fund will allow me to provide a watering station for traveling pollinators and local amphibians to get a drink and cool down. In turn, they will be more likely to help with pollination in the garden and keep unwanted pest populations down, what a lovely exchange?!

Through farming I will find ultimate personal satisfaction not just from interacting with the natural world, but also by providing my community with fresh, local, healthy, affordable produce- because that is what we need in our little mountain town; local veggies, and I am ready to do my part and ready for all the hard work, perseverance, and creativity it will take along the way to make it happen.


This loan is special because:

This loan empowers an experienced farmer to use her expertise to expand Eastern Oregon's newest woman-owned market farm, offering rural communities responsibly grown, healthy food.



Loan details


About Wallowa Wild

Industry: Agriculture
Years in operation: 1 year - 3 years
Website: wallowawild.com


Lenders and lending teams




Loan details