The Concord Monitor Online Edition
The Concord Monitor Online Edition The Concord Monitor Online Edition
Saturday, November 21, 2009 The news you need now
Subscribe  |  Newsletter  |  Place an ad  |  Contact us
Home
News
Local headlines
Obituaries
Town by town
Politics
New England
Nation-World
We Went To War
Business
Opinion
Editorials
Letters
Columns
Write a letter
Photography
*Pulitzer Winner*
PhotoExtra
Multimedia
Anthrozoology
Photo blog
Teen Life
Web Cam
Entertainment
Dining Deals
Books
Movies
Music
Tuned In
Special Sections
(All Special Sections)
virginia
 
Defiant dairy farm resists urban sprawl
Family works to keep business, tradition alive
Font size:
Comments


February 24, 2008 - 12:00 am

On the southern edge of Purcellville, Va., Loudoun County's rural roots are locked in a standoff with suburban encroachment.

There, Dogwood Farm stands its ground against a landscape of new mansions pushing up against the wire fence encircling the cows. This is Loudoun's last dairy farm, the only remnant of a business that once defined the county, which thrived by providing milk and other dairy products to city folk in Washington, D.C. In the 1950s, about 400 dairy farms blanketed the county. Now three-car garages face off with a cluster of weathered barns and silos.

"It was inevitable," said Nancy Potts, 49, whose family owns Dogwood. "You're right near Washington. This is where the jobs are."

The penultimate dairy farm, owned by cousins of Nancy's husband, Mike Potts, sold off its cows in 2005. Residents speculated that it was only a matter of time before Dogwood would go, too.

But just as rumors flew that those behemoth homes might prevail, the forces that propelled so much building abated. The housing market has burned out like a spent comet. And developers, who months ago might have flung millions of dollars at property like Dogwood Farm, have closed their wallets.

What a relief. At last, Nancy and Mike can be left alone, carrying on a family business that dates to 1847. If it were up to the Pottses, Dogwood would be invisible to prying eyes and curious outsiders. Mike doesn't like to discuss his life, nor does he have time for interviews. He said he's too busy running the farm.

"Mike doesn't want to be known as the last farm," Nancy said. "Clark and Frederick have good dairy farms, so we're not that isolated."

However, against Loudoun's landscape of houses, they stick out. Grazing cows are such an unusual sight that passers-by often stop to take pictures, even if unaware that Dogwood is steeped in family legacy and tells the story of Loudoun's rapid urbanization.

Decades back, two Potts brothers married two sisters from a local family, splitting their kin between their two dairy farms that were just nine miles apart. The other homestead, the second-to-last, was founded in 1747 and passed down to Mike's cousins, Eddie and Marty Potts.

Even their cows shared a common heritage. Another local family raised the "Bull of the Century," a Holstein that fathered 8.8 million descendants with the help of artificial insemination. An Agriculture Department study said the valuable pedigree appears in more than 90 percent of Holstein bulls in every major dairy country.

The couple, with help from the fourth generation - their three children - continues to raise and milk their 80-cow herd. It's a 24-hours-a-day, seven-days-a-week on-call job, without vacation.

The younger son, in middle school, and daughter, in elementary school, plan on showing their prize cows at the Loudoun County Fair and the state fair this year. Every morning at 4:30, Mike begins milking the herd.

At the same time, around those wee morning hours, some commuters are hitting the road to beat rush hour traffic to Washington, and the local Starbucks are busy brewing their morning coffee.

The Potts are out of step with the new rhythm of life in Loudoun, but this is the life they know.

Nancy and Mike Potts met at Virginia Tech, where they both majored in dairy science. They married after graduation, and Nancy, who grew up on a dairy farm in southern West Virginia, moved to Loudoun, where Mike's family owned and rented about 400 acres.



Single page | 1 | 2 |


 

-->
Top Jobs
View all Top Jobs
NEWSPAPERS IN EDUCATION Concord Monitor can deliver free newspapers to your local school's classrooms. Find out how.
Subscribe | Advertiser Profiles | Jobs | Autos | Real Estate | Classifieds | Photo Reprints | Contact Us

Copyright 1997-2009
Concord Monitor and New Hampshire Patriot
P.O. Box 1177
Concord NH 03302
603-224-5301
Privacy policy
Copyright policy