“That's why she still farms. She has that passion,” Shegow said. “Having that passion in your own business, it just makes you work better.”
Amisa Zuberi also connected with Fresh Start Farms after her experience farming in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Speaking Kinyarwanda to translator and ORIS program coordinator Jean Mugabo, Zuberi said farming allows her flexibility that other jobs don’t allow.
“She says she has multiple [medical] conditions that prevent her from doing eight hour shifts,” Mugabo relayed. “So she chose farming because she works her own schedule.”
But Zuberi had to make some changes when she moved to New Hampshire. She used to farm rice and cassava, but cassava needs tropical weather to grow, not a New Hampshire winter.
Fresh Start Farm Manager Jed Crook says that’s a common struggle for New American farmers. Part of his job is teaching farmers what makes sense to grow for the New Hampshire climate and growing seasons.
“Growing food in New Hampshire is extremely different than growing food in Western or Eastern or Central Africa in terms of climates, soil types, everything,” Crook said.
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