When Bill Evans saw small Amish and Mennonite farms struggling against dairy giants, he gathered these traditional farmers together at a place called Awesome Corner in Kalona, Iowa. Their solution became Kalona SuperNatural, a cooperative that now supports about 60 family farms across Iowa, Missouri, and Illinois.
These farms, many in the same families for 150 years, keep their cows on grass year-round, even through winter. Their land has never known chemicals, herbicides, or pesticides
When Bill Evans saw small Amish and Mennonite farms struggling against dairy giants, he gathered these traditional farmers together at a place called Awesome Corner in Kalona, Iowa. Their solution became Kalona SuperNatural, a cooperative that now supports about 60 family farms across Iowa, Missouri, and Illinois.
These farms, many in the same families for 150 years, keep their cows on grass year-round, even through winter. Their land has never known chemicals, herbicides, or pesticides. That's not because of modern organic trends, but because it's how they've always farmed. Generations-old farming practices create ecological oases that rejuvenate soil and protect watersheds while preserving a way of life.