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Terminator Weed Potentially Fighting Climate Change

Don’t get me started on invasive species like phragmites being introduced in South Florida. We have had to make some hard decisions on the farm: poison the bugs killing our Hemlocks or release zombie beetles to eat the tree-killing beetles… it’s an ongoing battle. In Maryland they are trying to turn an invasive issue into…

Bags of ginseng
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Ginseng and the Trade War with China

Ginseng has quite the reputation. Did you know that Rasputin used ginseng to treat the hemophilia of the last Czar of Russia’s son? Or that ginseng’s scientific name Panax means all-healing in Greek? Now researchers are looking at ginseng to treat COPD and boost cancer-treatment drugs. Wisconsin farmers who cultivate the plant are hopeful that…

One-Metrocenter-Nashville

Lindemann Multifamily Management Acquires Nashville Apartment Community for $83.2M

Coal Creek Farm started my love affair with Tennessee. I’ve loved the farm, and I’ve learned so much about hemlock trees and zombie beetles, about controlled burns and uncontrolled invasives (this is bad in every form.) Thanks to the farm, we started to make business investments in Knoxville, Nashville, and Chattanooga.

Treated hemlock in a forest.

Saving one farm’s hemlocks — it all comes down to a choice

As published in AGDAILY Too often, my childhood dreams were haunted by Dawn of the Dead’s flesh-eating zombies. In a nightmare made real, and years later, I have to choose between flesh-eating Japanese zombie beetles and poison in order to save my Cumberland Plateau, Tennessee, hemlock trees. Poison, hemlocks and beetles, oh my. Read more…