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Today I'm talking with Jonathan Lawler at The Punk Rock Farmer. You can follow on Facebook as well. A Tiny Homestead Podcast is sponsored by Homegrowncollective.org. Muck Boots Calendars.Com If you'd like to support me in growing this podcast, like, share, subscribe or leave a comment. Or just buy me a coffee https://buymeacoffee.com/lewismaryes 00:00 Did you know that muck boots all started with a universal problem? Muck? And did you know that it's their 25th anniversary this year? Neither did I. But I do know that when you buy boots that don't last, it's really frustrating to have to replace them every couple of months. So check out muck boots. The link is in the show notes. The very first thing that got hung in my beautiful kitchen when we moved in here four and a half years ago was a calendars.com Lang calendar. 00:26 because I need something familiar in my new house. My mom loves them. We love them. Go check them out. The link is in the show notes. You're listening to A Tiny Homestead, the podcast comprised entirely of conversations with homesteaders, cottage food producers, and crafters and topics adjacent. I'm your host, Lewis. A Tiny Homestead podcast is sponsored by Homegrown Collective, a free to use farm to table platform, emphasizing local connections with ability to sell online, buy, sell, trade in local garden groups, and help us grow a new food system. 00:56 You can find them at homegrowncollective.org. If you're enjoying this podcast, please like, subscribe, share it with a friend, or leave a comment. Thank you. Today I'm talking with Jonathan Lawler, also known as the punk rock farmer in Indiana. I think you're in Indiana, yes? Yes, that's correct. All right. Welcome, Jonathan. How are you? I'm good. How did you fare with the weather in Indiana last night? It was a little bit rough. We're kind of used to it. 01:25 My farm's been hit by a tornado. I don't know twice. I lost a packing shed to a tornado a few years ago. Weirdly enough, last night, you know, we thought we were kind of ahead of the storm. So we decided to run to Walmart together. Well, which was weird. We usually don't go to Walmart as a family. my wife wanted to stop at another place up to town. So she came with us. 01:56 And she actually came in because she said it was getting so bad. And as we were in there, the Walmart basically shut down and made everybody go back to their like, uh, receiving and storage area where it's designated as a storm shelter. Well, I'm glad you're safe because I saw that there were bad storms in Indiana last night and I was like, Oh no, I think the guy I'm talking to today is in Indiana crap. So glad you're good. Glad your family is safe. 02:26 Um, so tell me about yourself and tell me how come you're called The Punk Rock Farmer. So I actually didn't come up with that name. Um, I didn't like the name when people started calling me that, uh, you know, because when you get a label put on you, that's as wide as something representing an entire subculture in a music scene, it's kinda, you know, 02:54 You feel like there's a lot of pressure there. You might not align with everything that that subculture represents. But I was so we were working. We were doing urban farm projects in Indianapolis and a wonderful organization known as the Flannery House had been trying to put in an urban farm for like four years. They were working with a university and the university had them on like their ninth 03:24 feasibility study and the executive director was getting super frustrated and I was actually providing produce to this this community center and he took me out to where he wanted to do it and he said you know what is the feasibility of doing this because you know we we keep having you know the university we're working with says we got to make sure we're doing this this and this and I said do you have soil Sam? 03:53 And he's like, yeah, I said, okay, well, let's look at them. I looked at the soil samples and I'm like, well, we can put a plow on the ground and, you know, start planting. I mean, I don't, you know, the spring, I don't know what their holdup is. And he said, okay, you know, I'm all for that. So we actually put in a two acre urban farm there and they have a center for children. 04:22 that the center has a after school, it's for after school for their working parents. And they have a lot of young kids there. And Brandon, the executive director told me, he said, make sure, if you can, bring a cool tractor or, so I was like, I can bring two tractors. That way we get it done twice as fast and the kids can see them. So we brought two, one good size utility tractor than a smaller utility tractor. 04:53 The kids had just never seen anything like that. And of course we used two big F-350 farm trucks to pull those up there. I was wearing jeans, boots, but I had a Misfits shirt on and my hair was really long and tattoos...