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Quality of life and livelihood on the organic family farm

Chuck Crimmins feeds Bacon and Sausage, the two pigs his family is raising for meat.
Chuck Crimmins feeds Bacon and Sausage, the two pigs his family is raising for meat.
Juliet tomato plants are about ready to be planted at the Crimmins Family Farm. A healthy Juliet plant could produce up to 10,000 tiny fruit over the growing season. (Malea Hargett photo)
Juliet tomato plants are about ready to be planted at the Crimmins Family Farm. A healthy Juliet plant could produce up to 10,000 tiny fruit over the growing season. (Malea Hargett photo)
The Crimmins family all pitches in to make a meat-free Friday lunch April 13. From left are Mary, 17; mother Lucrecia; Sophia, 15; Abigail, 21; Elizabeth, 10; and Emilie, 19. (Malea Hargett photo)
The Crimmins family all pitches in to make a meat-free Friday lunch April 13. From left are Mary, 17; mother Lucrecia; Sophia, 15; Abigail, 21; Elizabeth, 10; and Emilie, 19. (Malea Hargett photo)
Chuck Crimmins checks on kale at the Crimmins Family Farm April 13. The family sells at the Argenta Farmers Market, a certified Arkansas market, every Saturday morning through October. (Malea Hargett photo)
Chuck Crimmins checks on kale at the Crimmins Family Farm April 13. The family sells at the Argenta Farmers Market, a certified Arkansas market, every Saturday morning through October. (Malea Hargett photo)
Chuck and Lucrecia Crimmins homeschool their four youngest daughters – Emilie, Sophia, Elizabeth and Mary. Abigail (right) is a sophomore at Wyoming Catholic College. Not pictured is oldest daughter, Sister Carmencita, who lives in Nebraska. (Malea Hargett photo)
Chuck and Lucrecia Crimmins homeschool their four youngest daughters – Emilie, Sophia, Elizabeth and Mary. Abigail (right) is a sophomore at Wyoming Catholic College. Not pictured is oldest daughter, Sister Carmencita, who lives in Nebraska. (Malea Hargett photo)

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PERRYVILLE — Chuck and Lucrecia Crimmins were big on organic before it was cool.

The self-proclaimed hippies who met in Ecuador while serving in the Peace Corps professed a love of sustainable gardening because that is what they knew and what was affordable.

“Organic agriculture is very Catholic,” Chuck proudly proclaimed.

The couple who live near Heifer Ranch in Perryville have a two-acre organic vegetable farm that is worked with four of the couple’s six daughters.

There is quiet 10-year-old Elizabeth, a third-grader who hasn’t quite found her niche. Then there’s 15-year-old Sophia, a novelist. Seventeen-year-old Mary loves her shade garden with fruits and flowers. Nineteen-year-old high school senior Emilie hopes to attend Thomas Aquinas College in California this fall where she could complete her work study in landscaping. Twenty-one-year-old Abigail pitches in when she is home from Wyoming Catholic College. The oldest, Molly, is now known as Sister Carmencita of the Child Jesus and lives in Nebraska as a cloistered Carmelite nun.

Customers of the Argenta Farmers Market in North Little Rock — which allows only Arkansas-grown produce and crafts — know the family well for their pleasant demeanor and abundant harvests.

Abigail said farming gave her such a strong work ethic and time management skills — rising at 4:30 a.m. and working until the job is done — that when she got to college she had too much time on her hands. She helped start a school bakery, teaching others how to make bagels and pastries.

Chuck said the path to full-time farming began as a city boy in Dallas and New Orleans. He was fascinated by the life his grandparents led in rural Louisiana.

He earned a degree in forest management and joined the Peace Corp as a tropical forester in the Philippines and South America. He met Lucrecia, a pre-medicine graduate originally from Costa Rica.

They taught about organic farming out of necessity. With no money for pesticides, they showed locals how to use marigold or pepper juice to ward off pests.

“There is something about being a good steward,” Lucrecia  said. “It might take longer and it might be more tedious to rotate the crops for example, but because good stewardship works with the nature of God’s creation, there’s a peace of soul that accompanies the tasks.” 

They were married in 1988 by a missionary priest, and they slowly re-engaged with the Catholic faith they were raised with. In 1989 they made a 20,000-mile trip around the United States to learn about sustainable agriculture and landed at Heartland Farms in Kansas run by Dominicans.

In 1994 the Crimmins were looking for a permanent place to call home and raise a family, and they found Heifer Ranch in Central Arkansas. Chuck Crimmins got to educate visitors about ways to eradicate poverty and hunger through sustainable farming while his wife homeschooled their daughters. In January he left Heifer Ranch to focus on growing Crimmins Family Farm.

The USDA-certified organic vegetable, herb and flower farm is columns of raised beds of young transplants and seeds right now but soon will be bountiful with lettuce, broccoli, kale, tomatoes and squash. Three bee hives on the land help pollinate crops.

“It is labor intensive,” he said of organic farming. “We plant everything by hand, we harvest by hand … Ours isn’t a heavy-handed operation. It is a soft touch to the earth.”

When the family isn’t farming as much in the winter, they eye seed catalogs for what they want to plant the next spring.

“My whole life’s path has been tied (to the earth). We are supposed to have dominion over the earth, not domination …” Chuck said.

The Crimmins, members of the St. John Latin Mass Community in North Little Rock, live a traditional life outside the garden as well. They are raising two hogs for meat, nurture seedlings in a greenhouse and can lots of vegetables to store in their root cellar. They taught natural family planning in Spanish for many years.

“It’s a whole lifestyle,” Chuck said “It’s canning and cooking. The slower pace. … The land slows you down.”

The daughters are thankful for the skills they have learned from living on a farm.

“It’s definitely taught me time management,” Emilie said. “I really do love gardening. I am growing strawberry plants and raspberry bushes. Sometimes school is stressful. Gardening is very calming.”

The pope’s encyclical “Laudato Si” reaffirms the Crimmins’ devotion for caring for God’s creation.

“We are tied to the earth like the pope’s encyclical said, maybe even more than we know,” Chuck said.

In addition to the Argenta Farmers Market, produce from Crimmins Family Farm can be bought through Locally Grown food clubs in Conway and Little Rock. 

Malea Hargett

Malea Hargett has guided the diocesan newspaper as editor since 1994. She finds strength in her faith through attending Walking with Purpose Bible studies at Christ the King Church in Little Rock.

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