Our Story

The Journey Continues


This season we are excited to explore seed saving, medicinal herb production and preparation, and milk and vegetable fermentation We will continue to care for this land as it supports the farm organism, our community and surrounding ecosystem.

We hope you can be involved in local, organic food and flowers wherever you are. Whether you are a young person exploring life, a hopeful farmer, a busy parent, a retiree, or in-between jobs, there is a farm waiting for you to get involved in. It’s a win-win relationship for all!

Since this film was finished in the winter/spring 2019, we have had four successful seasons on the new farm thanks to our supportive community and farm family!
We have gotten to know our productive and nourishing deep soils. We are using minimal tillage, compost, cover crops, and biodynamic soil preparations to support their further development.

Though we are taking a break in 2023 from farmers markets and vegetable CSA program, we have a blossoming cut flower program that provides farm-grown, organic flowers by way of our CSA program, local florists, weddings and special events. We have added laying hens to the Full Circle and our cow, Honeysuckle is soon to be milking again! With great joy we observe elk, deer, wolves, coyotes, fox, weasels, owls, songbirds, cranes, hawks, falcons and hundreds of pollinators on the farm seasonally.

Farm Where You Are

The Story of Teton Full Circle Farm

It is really no surprise we farm. We both grew up in families where much of the food we ate came from the backyard. From a young age we learned how to raise, care for, and take pride in a productive home garden. As we got older, we became more and more spoiled on an abundance of good things to eat. Gardening became a passion, a way of life.

“…For all things produced in the garden, whether of salads or fruits, a poor man will eat better that has one of his own, than a rich man that has none.”
- J.C. Loudon, An Encyclopedia of Gardening, 1826

We fell in love the summer of 2012. Erika, a seasoned farmer and gardener was in her fourth year as farm manager at Snowdrift Farm. Ken, an idealistic intern with big ideas was fresh out of college with his sights set on farming. We became inseparable. Sharing a propensity toward simple living, a deep appreciation for nature, and an incurable gardening fever, we embarked on a path to heal the earth through organic/biodynamic farming.

In 2013, we founded Erika Eschholz LLC doing business under the Snowdrift Farm name. After completing a successful season and becoming engaged in the fall, an irresistible opportunity arose at the former Blue Flax Farm. In spring, 2014 Teton Full Circle Farm was born.

From the beginning of Teton Full Circle Farm, we sought a place to sink our roots and call home. Though we loved simple living, our off-grid yurt life with no running water would take its toll. We considered buying our farm at Mountainside Village outright, but could not afford to purchase at development prices. We looked farther afield.

“I have often thought that if heaven had given me a choice of position and calling, it should have been on a rich spot of earth, well watered, and near a good market for the productions of the garden.”
- Thomas Jefferson, 1811

We identified four property purchase essentials to guide our land search: good soil, reliable water access, supportive community, and affordable land. In 2015, we visited a property in Greenville, West Virginia complete with rolling pastures and expansive woods, only to find that despite its incredible natural beauty it lacked reliable water and supportive community.

In February 2016 Erika’s parents found a dream farm for sale near their home in Maine. It was 90-acres of picturesque fields and woodland boasting a well-kept historic farm house, barns and outbuildings. Moreover this farm was listed at below half its original market value thanks to the Maine Farmland Trust. In a novel strategy for conserving land, the Farmland Trust purchased the farm, placed an agricultural easement on the property and listed it without its development rights, making this idyllic farm not just affordable, but a screaming deal. It sounded too good to be true - and it was. Applications to purchase the farm closed the day before we called. Disappointed yet encouraged, we made contact with the Maine Farmland Trust to learn how agricultural easements make farmland affordable and protect it forever.

That spring we redoubled our efforts to find land out east. We scoured farm listings, made contact with land owners, and booked flights to Maine and Vermont. New England was charming and peaceful, but nowhere did we find all four of our criteria. We returned home heavy-hearted and back at square one. Meanwhile, our homecoming helped us realize how deeply we loved our community in the Tetons. How could we leave?

“A community is the mental and spiritual condition of knowing that the place is shared, and that the people who share the place define and limit the possibilities of each other's lives. It is the knowledge that people have of each other, their concern for each other, their trust in each other, the freedom with which they come and go among themselves.”
― Wendell Berry

A few weeks after our return, the perfect property surfaced just one mile north (as the crow flies) of our present leased land in Victor, Idaho. “Hey Ken and Erika, I saw a piece of property over by my place you may be interested in. It sounds a lot like what you said you’re looking for,” wrote Scott Paulson via text one evening in early July. A few days later on the 4th we visited the farm and within minutes knew it was the one. It had good soil, solid irrigation water, and the same great community we loved, and a reasonable price relative to other properties we viewed. The only problem was that, despite being more reasonable than other properties, this land was listed at development prices and out of our reach.

After all we had gone through, money was not going to deter us and we immediately set our minds to making this farm a reality. We contacted the USDA Farm Service Agency to see if we were candidates for a low-interest loan. Check. We contacted the Teton Regional Land Trust to see if they could put an agricultural easement on this property. Check. Thus encouraged, we chipped away at months of negotiations with the seller and one massive loan application from the USDA Farm Service Agency in-between harvest days. After submitting dozens of mind-numbing financial and agricultural reports from the last three years, we were accepted for a mortgage loan. Fall came, the growing season ended, and on November 4th, 2016 our dream came true. ​

Gardening has been a part of us all of our lives and we now have a place to pursue our vision. On this farm, we build soil, increase biodiversity, improve human health, and create opportunities for new farmers to pursue their passions. On this farm, community members learn, eat great food, share knowledge and skills, and spread love. Life just isn’t as delicious without local food and local farms, and we are grateful for the opportunity to serve our community and heal our planet.