Emily Johnson: Farm Team Profile and Projects

By tjohnson , 19 May, 2025
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Farm Hand: Emily Johnson

Emily Johnson isn’t just part of Triple "5" Farms — she is the fire in its forge. The will that pushes it forward. The reason it became more than an idea and turned into a living, breathing space of purpose, progress, and heart.

Let’s be clear: Emily is not a dreamer sitting back with a notebook. She is a doer. A digger. A mover. She doesn’t get lost in concepts — she grabs the reins and makes things happen. Where others hesitate, she acts. Where others give up, she leans in. With a persistence that can border on maddening (and frequently does), she is the reason anything on this farm gets finished at all — often ahead of schedule and in better shape than planned.

She has never shied away from the hard stuff. When animals are sick, she’s there. When something breaks, she fixes it or finds someone who can. When there are mouths to feed and fences to mend, she’s halfway through the job before anyone else finishes their coffee. Her default setting is full-speed-ahead. There is no "later" on Emily's schedule — only "right now" and "again if I have to."

She has a heart that simply won’t let go. Every animal, no matter how unlovable, gets a fair shot with her. She doesn’t see them as burdens — she sees them as beings worth fighting for. If there’s a goat limping, a bird not eating, or a calf out in the cold, Emily is already three steps into the solution before anyone even notices the problem.

Her intensity is unmatched — and yes, it can be frustrating. She’ll push, and push hard. She’ll correct you, call you out, and remind you what still isn’t done. But every ounce of that drive is poured into making this place better, stronger, and more worthy of the animals and people who depend on it.

Without Emily, this farm wouldn’t just be incomplete — it wouldn’t exist. There would be no paddocks, no animals, no rotating feed schedules or survival plans. Just me, sitting in a gaming chair like a sleepy cat, quietly saying I’d “get to it eventually.”

She is the force that turns effort into outcome. The reason there’s structure behind the dream. The iron behind the compassion. And yes, the love of my life. She’s built a legacy from scratch and poured herself into every inch of it — because she believes in doing the work, in making things better, and in never, ever stopping just because it’s hard.

Emily Johnson is the core of this farm. She is the one who doesn’t quit, the one who makes it real, and the one who loves it enough to never let it go undone.

Boss. Builder. Heart. Hammer. If you ever doubt why Triple "5" Farms exists — look no further than Emily.

Field Notes and Search Focus

We keep this guide practical for folks running real farms. The focus here is homesteading systems and self sufficiency, with clear steps and neighbor-tested lessons from day-to-day work. 🌱

Related Topics We Cover

farm planning, self sufficiency strategy, homestead workflow, small farm operations, family farm systems.

Questions Folks Ask Us

  • how to organize a working homestead for daily reliability
  • best way to plan labor and chores on a small farm
  • how to start self sufficient systems on rural property
  • what to prioritize first on a growing homestead
  • how to build farm routines that scale over time

Related Farm Guides

FAQ

How to organize a working homestead for daily reliability?

Start with a phased setup, validate in field conditions, and document maintenance as you go. That approach keeps homesteading systems and self sufficiency reliable and easier to scale.

Best way to plan labor and chores on a small farm?

Start with a phased setup, validate in field conditions, and document maintenance as you go. That approach keeps homesteading systems and self sufficiency reliable and easier to scale.

How to start self sufficient systems on rural property?

Start with a phased setup, validate in field conditions, and document maintenance as you go. That approach keeps homesteading systems and self sufficiency reliable and easier to scale.

What to prioritize first on a growing homestead?

Start with a phased setup, validate in field conditions, and document maintenance as you go. That approach keeps homesteading systems and self sufficiency reliable and easier to scale.

How to build farm routines that scale over time?

Start with a phased setup, validate in field conditions, and document maintenance as you go. That approach keeps homesteading systems and self sufficiency reliable and easier to scale.

How much should we budget before starting?

Use phased budgeting with a contingency buffer. Focus first on reliability, then optimize performance after baseline stability is proven.

Keep Exploring Triple 5 Farms

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