When farming and art combine.

 

Pete Treiber, Junior has always wanted to work in a creative field — he just didn't know it would happen so literally. He started as a camp counselor, granola maker, photo and video production assistant, and more before digging into the farm with his Pop, and he brings both his clever resourcefulness and his playful perspective to every bulb of garlic he grows. He's an artist and farmer who left the hustle and bustle of Brooklyn, New York behind to build an organic produce farm from the ground up with his father, Peter Treiber Sr. on the North Fork of Long Island. After eight years of hard work, he's turned Treiber Farms into a successful enterprise and while keeping everything organic, like farming should be.

And while he is certainly not the first person to leave a large city to become a farmer, he's the only example I know of who intertwines his love of visual art within his farming practices. Take a walk with Pete around the farm, and he'll regale you with stories of previous events hosted for art exhibits, artist-in-residence programs, and just good times in general. A sculptor himself. He also seems to be cultivating his own artistic vision to deepen his practices of feeding and nurturing others in a way that is distinctly human. He's a seeker, a self actualizer, a lightening rod of community, and a unique individual who I'm proud to call a friend.

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#9: Marian Cooper Cairns