For the Baileys, high-quality produce is a step toward genuine connections for Jesus.
On a farm tucked away in Upper Rollands Plains, about 40 minutes inland from Port Macquarie in New South Wales, Australia, lives the Bailey family. They are passionate about reaching their community with home-grown produce.
Diving full-time into farming after their two eldest children left home, Rod and Desley Bailey, along with their four younger children, opened “Masters of Fresh,” a family-owned and operated business well loved by the community.
“My husband, Rod, is full-time in the garden — from 7:00 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.,” Desley explained. “I do more the marketing and value-adding side of things. I go to the markets on Tuesday and Wednesday; on Thursday, I make deliveries to cafes and restaurants. And Mondays I spend in the kitchen, so anything we have a lot of in the garden or anything that comes home from the market, I’ll turn into something else and sell it the following week.”
While Rod and a couple of hired farmhands complete most of the gardening work, their youngest, Jack, spends up to four hours in the garden per day, in between home-schooling classes, while the older girls still at home, Hannah and Ella, are busy completing their studies.
“We grow a wide range — pretty well all the common veggies that are in season,” Rod added. “From autumn through to early spring, we grow carrots, beetroots, cabbages, broccoli, silverbeet, chard, a range of herbs, Chinese vegetables, Kohlrabi. At any one time, we’ve usually got 30 crops or so that we’re harvesting. At the moment, we’re waiting for our zucchini and eggplant and tomatoes and things. That adds another 10 to 12 summer crops, as well as maintaining the others.”
With a mission to help families thrive, the Baileys are passionate about cultivating high-quality produce and making genuine, close connections with customers.
“My philosophy is that we’re called to live as Christ lived on this earth,” Desley said. “Christ’s method alone. If you are open and show that you care about people when they come, they are attracted to Christ in us. I get opportunities to make suggestions to help families struggling with a baby that’s not sleeping, or to befriend an elderly person who is so lonely that they come to the market for a hug.”
Rod said that God’s blessings aren’t only found at the markets and through community interactions but also through the process of gardening itself.
“I’ve done a lot of things in my life — opened a health retreat, been involved in youth training for mission and medical missionary work, and all sorts of different things — and they’ve all had their blessings and opportunities. But I think for me, after spending many years with people all day and sometimes all night as well, having time with God in nature and being actively involved with Him in His work in the garden has been a great personal blessing. I believe my mental health is better than it’s ever been. I love being out in the elements. Cold, frosty mornings are fantastic, sharing it with the birds.”
“Another thing that is spiritually strengthening,” Desley added, “is that, to a great degree, we’re at God’s mercy as to whether we make an income at all. Droughts, floods, hail — they’ve wiped us out. In February this year, when we got the break from the drought, we lost 90 percent of our crops with that rain. It allows the community to be part of us. They want to help us. When we hurt, they sympathize.”
The Baileys send out a weekly email to more than 400 subscribers to nurture connections with the community. “It’s always something about the garden. They love it. They love reading about our family, our life,” Desley said.
The Baileys also open their farm to local women who bring their children to the garden each week for anywhere between two and six hours.
“The mums come and help, and all the kids are involved in different aspects of harvesting and gardening. They take home a box of veggies. We love that experience, seeing the youngsters learn. Some are Adventists, and some aren’t. But I really enjoy the relationship I have with the youngsters,” Rod said.
While passionate about providing high-quality produce, the Baileys also want to equip and inspire people to grow their fruit and vegetables at home — as a way to improve food security in uncertain times and as a means of making community connections.
“A key aspect of food security is that more people need to start growing food in their backyards, to regain and enhance that knowledge. Today, society has given that responsibility to a small group of overworked farmers, which is destructive to them and our cultural longevity,” Rod explained.
“The year before last, I did a series of emails on the basics of gardening. Some customers said we were crazy because then they wouldn’t need to buy vegetables from us. But as part of our mission of wanting families to flourish, we actively encourage our customers to grow veggies in their gardens.”
Desley added that learning to grow vegetables is both a rewarding educational process and a method of outreach.
“You could stay at home and look up [how to grow vegetables] on the internet, but I could find someone in my street — a grandma or grandpa who loves gardening — and that’s even better, because that’s what we’re called to do. Now you have an opportunity to share with them.”
Rod adds, “In The Desire of Ages, Ellen White talks about ‘trust awakening trust’ — how Jesus asked a favor of the woman at the well, made Himself vulnerable to win her trust. And when we go to someone to ask for advice, that’s the start of a trust relationship. Who knows where that might lead?”
The original version of this story was posted by Adventist Record.