Producer
Sweet Goat Farm*
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About Us
Welcome to our historic farm in Westport, MA where we raise show-quality Nigerian Dwarf goats (a miniature dairy breed). We milk our does daily from spring through early winter. We drink the delicious raw milk and make yogurt, kefir, cheese, caramels, soap, and bath products. We also tend fruit beds and a small orchard and make jams, jellies, and pies with our fruit.
In 2011 we bought the historic Oscar Palmer Farm on Adamsville Road, a former stagecoach stop on the New Bedford/Little Compton line. The farm has been owned by only 5 families since 1700 -- the Potters, the Tripps, the Brownells, The Tabers, and the Palmers. When its final Palmer owner died in 2001 and the heirs wished to sell the property for maximum value, the 300-year-old family farmstead was saved from development by the town of Westport, the Westport Land Conservation Trust, and the Massachusetts Trustees of Reservations. After placing historic preservation, conservation, and agricultural restrictions on the property, the groups initiated an RFP process to sell the farm outright to new owners who would agree to historically restore the buildings and bring the farm back into active agricultural use. Our proposal was chosen and we took ownership in May of 2011.
We have reclaimed the back pasture from multiflora rose and are carefully planting an heirloom-variety orchard. The remaining 14 acres of land are wooded, and the lovely Angeline Brook meanders through the property. Angeline Brook is one of the few remaining Massachusetts cold-water estuaries that empties into salt water (in our case Buzzards Bay) and supports an active population of sea-run brook trout (also called salters). Salters swim downstream from the native brooks where they were born to feed in the salt water for a few months during the summer. They return to their native freshwater tributaries in the late summer or autumn to spawn.
Our meticulous restoration of the house, barn, and outbuildings was a 5-year labor of love, assisted by funding from the Westport Community Preservation Commission and a cadre of talented tradesmen. We excitedly moved to the farm with our goat herd in the fall of 2016.
Post-pandemic we hope to open the farm to the public for seasonal farm tours, classes, a small farm store (featuring goat milk products, baked goods, an antiques corner, and a rotating local artists gallery).
In 2011 we bought the historic Oscar Palmer Farm on Adamsville Road, a former stagecoach stop on the New Bedford/Little Compton line. The farm has been owned by only 5 families since 1700 -- the Potters, the Tripps, the Brownells, The Tabers, and the Palmers. When its final Palmer owner died in 2001 and the heirs wished to sell the property for maximum value, the 300-year-old family farmstead was saved from development by the town of Westport, the Westport Land Conservation Trust, and the Massachusetts Trustees of Reservations. After placing historic preservation, conservation, and agricultural restrictions on the property, the groups initiated an RFP process to sell the farm outright to new owners who would agree to historically restore the buildings and bring the farm back into active agricultural use. Our proposal was chosen and we took ownership in May of 2011.
We have reclaimed the back pasture from multiflora rose and are carefully planting an heirloom-variety orchard. The remaining 14 acres of land are wooded, and the lovely Angeline Brook meanders through the property. Angeline Brook is one of the few remaining Massachusetts cold-water estuaries that empties into salt water (in our case Buzzards Bay) and supports an active population of sea-run brook trout (also called salters). Salters swim downstream from the native brooks where they were born to feed in the salt water for a few months during the summer. They return to their native freshwater tributaries in the late summer or autumn to spawn.
Our meticulous restoration of the house, barn, and outbuildings was a 5-year labor of love, assisted by funding from the Westport Community Preservation Commission and a cadre of talented tradesmen. We excitedly moved to the farm with our goat herd in the fall of 2016.
Post-pandemic we hope to open the farm to the public for seasonal farm tours, classes, a small farm store (featuring goat milk products, baked goods, an antiques corner, and a rotating local artists gallery).