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Black hammock farm'S Out Reach Programs

From Destruction to Creation and Healing

Black Hammock Farm extends beyond commercial agriculture into three community outreach programs, each reflecting our core belief that working the land offers pathways to peace, belonging, and resilience.

Fields of Peace Program

A Day with Brothers and Animals

Fields of Peace provides veteran service members a space for recovery, connection, and purpose through hands-on agricultural work. Farming offers what many veterans seek after service: meaningful physical labor, connection to living things, quiet purpose, and brotherhood without the weight of conflict.

“The program operates on a simple premise: there is peace in the pasture.” — Kip Hudakoz.

Who We Serve:

  • Combat veterans processing transition to civilian life.

  • Veterans experiencing PTSD, anxiety, or difficulty reintegrating

  • Service members seeking community outside clinical settings

  • Any veteran curious about agriculture as a second career or personal practice

No diagnosis required. No paperwork. Just show up.


What at Day Looks Like

Participants arrive in the morning and work alongside Agent K—a Marine veteran of the Gulf War Era—tending the flock and maintaining the farm.

Activities may include:

  • Morning flock check and feeding

  • Moving sheep between paddocks

  • Setting up portable fencing for rotational grazing

  • Body condition scoring and individual animal assessment

  • Basic veterinary care and hoof maintenance

  • Fence repair and pasture improvement

  • Equipment maintenance

  • Poultry care and egg collection

The work is real. The sheep don't care about your service record—they need to be fed, moved, and looked after. There's something grounding in that simplicity.

Lunch is shared. Stories are optional. The land does most of the talking.

Program Philosophy

Clinical settings serve essential purposes, but not every veteran thrives in them. Some need to work with their hands. Some need animals that respond to calm, steady presence. Some need to be outdoors, away from fluorescent lights and waiting rooms.

Fields of Peace isn't therapy. It's farming. But farming has its own way of working on a person.

The transition from military service to civilian life often lacks clear purpose. Agriculture provides that purpose in its most elemental form: living things depend on you. The work matters. The results are visible. And at the end of the day, you've built something instead of destroying something.

Open Pasture Program

Sustainable Farming for Everyone

Misssion: Open Pasture Program creates accessible agricultural experiences for individuals of all abilities, with particular emphasis on welcoming those with disabilities and special needs. The farm becomes a classroom without walls—a place where everyone can contribute, learn, and connect with the land.

Sustainable farming isn't just about environmental practices. It's about sustaining people, communities, and futures. Open Pasture ensures that pathway is open to all.

“The program operates on a simple premise: When a community learns together, they grow together.” — Kip Hudakoz.

Who We Serve:

  • Individuals with developmental disabilities

  • Those with physical disabilities seeking adaptive agricultural activities

  • Special needs students and educational programs

  • Therapeutic programs seeking agricultural partnerships

  • Families wanting inclusive farm experiences

  • Anyone interested in sustainable farming education

Potential activities include:

Open Pasture adapts to participants rather than requiring participants to adapt to us. Activities are scaled, modified, and structured based on individual abilities and interests.

Potential activities include:

  • Sensory experiences with sheep (supervised interaction, wool textures)

  • Egg collection from heritage poultry

  • Planting and garden maintenance

  • Feeding routines with visual schedules

  • Nature observation and journaling

  • Basic animal care tasks

  • Harvest activities (seasonal)

  • Farm art projects using natural materials

Sessions can be structured for individuals, small groups, or organized programs. We work with caregivers, teachers, and therapeutic professionals to design experiences that meet specific goals.

Program Philosophy

Agricultural settings offer unique benefits for individuals with disabilities:

Sensory regulation — The farm provides rich, natural sensory input: animal textures, outdoor sounds, soil and vegetation, physical movement through space.

Predictable routines — Animals require consistent care. This creates structure that many individuals find calming and manageable.

Meaningful contribution — Every task on a farm matters. Collecting eggs, filling water troughs, spreading feed—these are real jobs with visible results. Participants aren't doing "activities." They're doing farm work.

Non-judgmental environment — Sheep don't care about diagnoses or limitations. They respond to calm presence and consistent handling. Success is measured in completed tasks, not standardized assessments.

Connection to natural systems — Understanding where food comes from, how animals live, how seasons change—these connections ground us in something larger than ourselves.

Connection to CommunOT

Black Hammock Farm proudly supports CommunOT Farm and Programming, which pioneers therapeutic agricultural experiences. Open Pasture draws inspiration from their model and seeks to expand access to farm-based programming in Seminole County. Contact CommunOT for more details

Seminole Small Farm Alliance

Strength in Numbers, Roots in Community

Mission: The Seminole Small Farm Alliance provides mutual support, shared resources, and collective advocacy for small-scale agricultural operations in Seminole County, Florida. In a region where development pressure and bureaucratic obstacles threaten small farms, the Alliance ensures no farmer stands alone.

“The program operates on a simple premise: there is peace in the pasture.” — Kip Hudakoz.

The Problem We Address:

Small farms in Seminole County face challenges that large agricultural operations don't:

Agricultural classification battles — Property Appraisers may deny agricultural classification to legitimate operations, forcing small farmers into expensive appeals. The process is opaque, inconsistent, and financially devastating for operations already running on thin margins.

Regulatory navigation — Zoning codes, development orders, livestock regulations, water management permits—small farmers must navigate systems designed for larger operations or residential properties, often with little guidance.

Isolation — Unlike agricultural regions where farmers have built-in community, Seminole County's small farms are often islands surrounded by suburban development. Farmers lack peers who understand their challenges.

Resource limitations — Equipment, expertise, veterinary services, processing facilities—resources readily available in rural agricultural areas are scarce or expensive in transitional counties like Seminole.


What the Alliance Offers

Advocacy and Classification Support

Black Hammock Farm recently prevailed in a Value Adjustment Board appeal after the Property Appraiser denied agricultural classification despite the operation meeting every statutory requirement. The magistrate ruled decisively in our favor, criticizing the Appraiser's narrow interpretation.


That experience—including over $10,000 in legal costs and months of preparation—produced hard-won knowledge:

  • How Florida Statute 193.461 actually works

  • What documentation establishes "bona fide commercial agriculture"

  • How to present evidence effectively to the VAB

  • Which legal arguments succeed and which fail

  • How to navigate the appeals timeline

Alliance members facing classification challenges don't start from zero. They start with our playbook, our documentation templates, and our experience. When possible, we can connect farmers with legal counsel who understand agricultural classification.

Shared Knowledge Base:

  • Best practices for livestock in Florida's climate

  • Veterinary and extension service contacts

  • Equipment sharing and rental opportunities

  • Processing and direct-sales guidance

  • Grant and financing resources

  • Insurance and liability considerations

Collective Voice:

Individual small farmers have little influence on county policy. A coalition of farms speaking together commands attention. The Alliance can:

  • Engage with county commissioners on agricultural issues

  • Participate in comprehensive plan updates affecting agricultural land

  • Advocate for small-farm-friendly interpretations of regulations

  • Build relationships with Planning, Zoning, and Property Appraiser offices

  • Represent small agriculture in conversations currently dominated by development interests

Community Connection:

Regular gatherings—whether formal meetings or informal farm visits—break the isolation that small farmers experience. Problems shared are problems halved. Successes celebrated together build momentum.

Memembership:

The Seminole Small Farm Alliance welcomes:

  • Operating farms of any size in Seminole County

  • Farms pursuing agricultural classification

  • Landowners considering agricultural use

  • Agricultural operations in adjacent counties facing similar challenges

  • Supporting members (non-farmers who support small agriculture)

Initial membership is informal—join our contact list, attend gatherings, participate in discussions. As the Alliance develops, we may establish more formal structure based on member needs.

Founding Principles

Non-partisan — Agricultural issues cross political lines. The Alliance advocates for small farms, not parties or candidates.

Collaborative with government — We work with county officials, not against them. The goal is partnership and mutual understanding, not adversarial relationships. Many officials simply don't understand small farm operations; education often resolves conflicts.

Respect for diversity — Small farms vary enormously: produce, livestock, nurseries, aquaculture, agritourism. All legitimate agricultural operations are welcome regardless of type or scale.

Rooted in heritage — Seminole County has deep agricultural history, from the celery fields of Black Hammock to the citrus groves that once covered the region. The Alliance honors that heritage while building agricultural futures.

Future Developement

  • Formal organizational structure (nonprofit status consideration)

  • Regular meeting schedule and communication channels

  • Resource library (legal templates, documentation guides, contact lists)

  • Annual small farm tour showcasing Alliance members

  • Partnerships with University of Florida IFAS Extension

  • Engagement with Florida Farm Bureau and other agricultural organizations

  • Advocacy agenda developed collaboratively by members

Program Integration

These three programs share common roots and reinforce each other:

Fields of Peace veterans may discover agricultural careers, potentially starting their own operations with Seminole Small Farm Alliance support.

Open Pasture Program participants experience working farms, building public appreciation for the small agriculture that the Alliance protects.

Alliance member farms may host Fields of Peace or Open Pasture programming, expanding reach beyond Black Hammock Farm alone.

All three embody Black Hammock Farm's core philosophy: agriculture as creation, healing, and community connection. The commercial breeding operation and Rent-A-Herd services provide the sustainable foundation. These outreach programs extend that foundation into service.


Contact and Next Steps

Fields of Peace inquiries: Veterans interested in farm days, or veteran service organizations seeking partnerships

Open Pasture Program inquiries: Individuals, families, educators, or therapeutic programs interested in accessible farm experiences

Seminole Small Farm Alliance inquiries: Farmers seeking support, landowners considering agriculture, or community members wanting to support small farms


All programs: blackhammockfarm.com

Black Hammock Farm — Live, Fresh, Local

BLACK HAMMOCK FARM NEWS

Historic farmland at Black Hammock Farm in Central Florida, where Katahdin sheep graze near old railroad ties and artesian wells that reflect the region’s celery farming past and modern conservation stewardship.

The Land Remembers

January 03, 20264 min read

The Land Remembers

Part 2 of 14 in the “Rooted in Heritage, Growing for Tomorrow” Series

There are places where history is preserved in museums.
And there are places where history is preserved in the soil.

The Black Hammock is the latter.

When you walk this land slowly—when you pay attention—you start to notice things that don’t belong to the present. Concrete collars half-buried and moss-covered, marking where artesian wells once flowed. Old railroad ties emerging from the ground at odd angles, their purpose long forgotten by most, but not by the land itself.

This ground remembers what it was asked to do.

And it remembers that it delivered.

When the Black Hammock Fed a Nation

In the early 1900s, this region wasn’t an afterthought on a map. It was an agricultural engine.

The Black Hammock—named for its dark, fertile muck soil—became the celery capital of Florida. By the 1920s, Oviedo and the surrounding area were producing nearly a quarter of the celery consumed in the United States. That didn’t happen by accident.

Farmers drained wetlands strategically. Artesian wells provided consistent irrigation. Rail lines were laid directly into the fields so produce could be harvested, packed, and shipped north within hours. This land was valuable because it was productive.

Families built their lives around that productivity.
Communities grew because the land gave them a reason to stay.

That era eventually faded. Markets changed. Development pressures increased. Farming moved elsewhere. But the soil never forgot what it was capable of.

Soil Has a Memory

Modern agriculture often treats land like a blank slate—something to be reshaped, paved, or repurposed. But anyone who works the ground knows better.

Soil remembers patterns.

It remembers where water wants to flow.
It remembers what grows easily and what struggles.
It remembers how it was managed—and mismanaged.

The rich muck soil of the Black Hammock still responds when treated with respect. Native grasses rebound quickly. Pastures recover faster than expected. Wetland edges stabilize when grazed correctly instead of mowed or sprayed.

This isn’t coincidence. It’s continuity.

We didn’t create this land’s productivity. We inherited it.

Stewardship Isn’t About Going Backward

Honoring history doesn’t mean pretending it’s still 1925.

We aren’t growing celery.
We aren’t laying new rail lines.
We aren’t draining wetlands for row crops.

What wearedoing is asking a more modern question:

How can this land continue to produce—without being destroyed in the process?

For us, the answer came through livestock suited to the environment. Katahdin sheep don’t fight Florida’s heat and humidity—they thrive in it. They graze selectively. They disturb the soil lightly. They manage vegetation without chemicals, machinery, or constant human intervention.

In many ways, they’re doing what celery once did: workingwiththe land instead of against it.

The Cost of Forgetting

When people say, “There’s no farming left here,” what they often mean is that they no longer recognize it.

Farming today doesn’t always look like it did a century ago. It’s quieter. Smaller. More adaptive. And often, more fragile.

Once land loses its agricultural identity, it becomes easier to justify paving it. Once a farm disappears, it rarely comes back. And when the last working fields are gone, so is the local knowledge of how to feed a community from its own soil.

Forgetting history has consequences.

Remembering it creates responsibility.

Carrying the Thread Forward

We don’t claim ownership of this legacy.
We claim guardianship.

Our role is temporary. The land will outlast us. The question is whether it will remain productive—or simply preserved as a memory behind fences and plaques.

Every decision we make at Black Hammock Farm is shaped by that awareness. We aren’t just farming for today’s needs. We’re farming in a way that leaves options open for those who come next.

Because this land has already proven what it can do—when it’s allowed to work.

What Comes Next

In the next part of this series, we’ll talk about the animals themselves—why heritage livestock matter, how genetic diversity is quietly disappearing, and why preserving functional breeds like Katahdin sheep isn’t nostalgia, but necessity.

The land remembers.

The question is whether we’re willing to listen.


Next in Part 3: “Built to Belong Here” — Why heritage livestock breeds are disappearing, and why Florida farms can’t afford to lose them.

Historical Farm LandSeminole CountyBlack Hammock FarmSeminole County FarmsRemembering FarmingOviedo Farm
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Khudakoz

KHudakoz is a on-line author who write about the outdoor life in florida

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Florida 32765

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Florida 32765

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© 2025 Black Hammock Family Farm. All rights reserved.