
Terry is co-owner and operator here at Twisted Roots Farm and she has a deep passion for making handcrafted creations using materials and ingredients sourced from our farm and forest or from other local farms. She loves rekindling old traditions, utilizing simple and raw ingredients to create special, one-of-a-kind offerings that have a story and connection to place. Terry also finds great joy in sharing these skills with others, knowing that as we gather together to engage in creativity and make offerings with our hands, we are also building resilient communities and reconnecting with what it truly means to be human. Her spare time (what is that when you farm?!?) is spent writing, crafting, and creating, as well as cuddling our adorable goats, dogs, and cat.

Will - Co-Owner, Twisted Roots Farm. My love for and connection with nature has always been a driving force in my life ever since I can remember. I was fortunate to have grown up on the doorstep of a vast boreal forest, guided by the passion my father had for the outdoors. My professional career spans many decades where I have found myself in positions that have placed me in the wilds of nature, and in the depths of the human condition. I have hiked through ancient temperate rain forests, kayaked with the wolves of the sea, engaged in environmental research, guided others into the beauty of the wilds, sat with the trauma and anxiety of our youth and their families, witnessed transformational change in rite of passage programs, listened to the struggles of the addicted, led initiatives to protect land, created curriculum to engage nature awareness and invited others to explore their relationship with the wild community. I have studied with many amazing teachers along the way, to which I owe an incredible depth of gratitude for. Their teachings and wisdom have guided me on this journey of nature human connection, allowing me to go even deeper in the ongoing courtship I have with this land and place I now call home. Over the last decade, my greatest teacher has been the farm and the forest, a place where I am immersed in the wilds on a daily basis. It has been a process of rewilding one's self and sinking deeply into the language of the wild community. I find myself in the role of farmer, builder, homesteader, permaculturalist, teacher, guide, visual artist, poet, and student of the land.
Our Story
In 2016, we sold everything we owned, said goodbye to family and friends, and hit the road with our truck and travel trailer in search of a place that would become our greatest teacher. Our desire to understand our food systems and root deeply with a place, had been calling to us for some time. The pressure of urban life and accelerated growth was not a life we wanted to continue living and we knew in our heart of hearts that if we truly wanted to understand our relationship with food and with the wild community (nature), this was the calling that we had to respond to. In 2017, we landed in Judique, Cape Breton after several months of travelling across Canada and the American Southwest. Here in this little village tucked away on the western shores of Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia, we found the land that had been calling to us for years. We had arrived home to 74 acres of forest. There were no roads into the property, no structures, and no power lines along the main access road. Only a beautiful forest and magical spring-fed brook that meanders through mature woodlands of Arcadian forest. For almost a decade now, we have been slowly creating a site that is inspired by permaculture design, supported by the health and well-being of the forest and watershed that breathes life into this place. Our Vision for this place is that she be given the opportunity to continue returning to a completely mature and healthy forest once again. That this place will remain intact, that she will serve as a refuge, a sanctuary, a pocket of cultural and ecological re-membering. A place that also demonstrates the ways in which human activity can support healthy ecosystems and permaculture-inspired living, where we live in reciprocity with the land and where we are co-creators with the wild community. This is where we must learn to live and thrive with nature, not fight against her or try to control her. We must learn to once again foster healthy relationships with our food systems and nature if we are to navigate what is coming our way. It is a process of remembering all the ways of being that our collective human cultures knew at one time in our histories, which is why we see this place, Twisted Roots Farm, as a Centre for Ecological Re-Membering. We know that in order to realize this vision we need community. Community building is key to the success of this little project in the woods. We have, since the beginning of our time here, invited others to share and learn together, helping build the foundation of this vision. We have hosted volunteers since 2018, where people from all over the world, young and old, have volunteered with us to learn about off-grid living, permaculture, homesteading, raising livestock, building, and nature-based connection. The stories we have held and witnessed are truly amazing, giving us the inspiration and fortitude to continue with this vision despite the hardships and challenges we have faced over the years. The land here is truly magical, one of those special places that is willing to hold us, offering her healing wisdom while listening to our stories. Those who have been willing to truly immerse themselves here have had life changing experiences through their interactions with the farm and the wild community that surrounds us. Like the young man from Tokyo who had experienced a lifetime of pain in his body from growing up in a large city, yet found relief from the pain by sleeping in the forest and taking early morning cold plunges in the brook in late September. Or the young man who visits us every year on his path to becoming a priest, who sings and finds beauty within the healing waters of the brook, or the young engineers who were looking for new directions in their lives and fell in love with our goats and then chose to say goodbye to good paying jobs and start a small goat farm and dairy. We are also in deep gratitude to the wonderful community of Judique and Cape Breton who have welcomed us to this place and continue to support all that we have put out into the world from the beauty of this place. Every year, we expand and add to the ways that we invite others to the farm and the forest, from goat walks in the woods to offering a variety of workshops and classes, including yoga to soap making in our newly built brookside lodge. This space in the woods has opened so many opportunities for us to host others in a unique forest setting, allowing for wellness and learning with nature. This project is about community; learning as a collective how to build resilience in a quickly changing and troubled world by relocalizing our systems so that we may give back to our communities, human and wild alike. Our Vision for the foundational work that is being developed here at Twisted Roots Farm is that this project continues beyond our time. To realize a continuance plan for all that is being created here. This starts with community and a new way of understanding land ownership in the shadow of a capitalist culture. In order for the work to continue, we know that there will have to be those who believe in what is unfolding here at Twisted Roots Farm. One of our goals for 2026 is to initiate the process of forming a non-profit society that will help navigate a continuance plan and create covenants and land use designations required to ensure the protection of this place for future generations. This will take much work and dedication from a community of folks invested in how this project unfolds. Once this has been accomplished, we see the role of the non-profit helping guide educational offerings here at Twisted Roots Farm, allowing for funding options that create more accessibility for all. We do not view this place as an exclusive spa or eco-retreat centre for only a select few. Our hope is that a non-profit of this nature can serve as a model of how land owners can create protected areas on their lands for their community, creating healthy ecosystems for future generations. Over time, we see the non-profit inheriting this land to continue the work that will be created here. We have risked everything and made huge sacrifices to be here, and we continue to listen to how this land wants to unfold her vision. Our dedication to this place goes beyond words, and our work, our form of engaged environmentalism, is the continued protection and preservation of this land. This place is and will continue to be an example of what can be done on a community level to demonstrate climate action, and how we must relate with the land, how we must be connected to our food, and how we can generate wellness through our relationship with nature. This is our life's work.
Our Vision
Our Vision: Communities in healthy relationships with the living Earth Our Mission: To bring together the practical wisdom of ritual farming, the diversity of permacultural design, the beauty of artistic creativity and the reclaiming of the commons to inspire and co-create community resiliency, holistic learning, and nature-based dialogue. Healthy Relationships with the Living Earth/Land At the core of what we do, this is our guiding vision, to be in a healthy relationship with the living Earth. Without a healthy environment, the land cannot support all the diversity required for the well being of communities, wild and human alike. Many human activities in their current form are destructive processes that are degrading and killing the intricacies of the reciprocal relationships that exist between us and the natural world. Ritual Farming Ritual Farming speaks to the way we interact with the food we grow. We have lost many of the beautiful ways we once connected to food and place as we continue to migrate into cities and larger communities as a result of our industrialized culture. This transition has meant that we have lost the story of the seeds that fed our cultures, and no longer honour those sacred agreements that our ancestors made with the plants and animals that sustained us. As we continue to create and evolve the plant and animal communities that we tend to here on the farm, we are learning as best we can how to re-member the rich stories and lineage contained within the seeds that have so graciously agreed to work with us. We are no experts in ritual farming, and learn more with each growing season as we sink deeper into this way of tending to the land. Our inspiration for this practice is deeply rooted in the work of Martin Prechtel. In his book “The Unlikely Peace at Cuchumaquic, The Parallel Lives of People as Plants” he offers us great insight into this way of being in relationship to all the beings that we tend to in order to give us life. It is a manifesto for fostering these unique relationships that all of our ancient ancestors would have practiced. Our goal is to rediscover these different practices so that we may engage in beautiful farming once again. Permaculture Design “Permaculture is a design system for creating sustainable human environments. The word itself is a contraction not only of permanent agriculture but also of permanent culture, as cultures cannot survive for long without a sustainable agricultural base and land use ethic.” Bill Mollison, Introduction to Permaculture. Since arriving on this land in 2017, our method of systems design has been based on permaculture principles and ethics (philosophy). Our goal is to develop and co-create systems of human environments that are resilient and in a reciprocal relationship with the wild community that surrounds and is part of the human landscape. We have been working with the land in this way and continue to design, create and test various methods of growing food, raising livestock, and building infrastructure that reflect the philosophy of permaculture. We recognize that this is a hands-on learning practice, and that time will allow for an equilibrium to develop in how all the pieces of these various life-giving systems will eventually evolve and support one another. When we started this project, we literally started from a place that had no human habitation, we were in the middle of a forest. This has given us the privilege to observe, create, develop and evolve with the landscape and the knowledge that we have gained from this continues to guide us into the future. It has been a slow process that has allowed for course corrections while providing us with larger insights as we view this development through the lens of permaculture. As the systems continue to mature, we are at a critical point of co-creation where the next phase of this permaculture design project will bring together many of the systems that have been in development since 2017. Our goal is to share our knowledge of permaculture with the larger community and designate this site as a demonstration site for others to contribute, learn, and practice within their own local habitats and communities. This includes things such as: Localized food production – growing a diversity of foods and extending growing seasons to allow for seasonal and year round enjoyment of healthy, nutrient dense foods Learning how to prepare and cook the diversity of foods available locally Localizing other resources that contribute to the overall economy of the farm and the community Advertisement Designating the farm as an off-grid permaculture demonstration site removes us from the model of high production farming and places us into the area of creating more biodiversity and economic diversity. The site will act as a testing ground for research and development to inspire individuals and other communities and we will work cooperatively with other homesteaders and farms to diversify towards creating community resilience. Artistic Creativity Creativity and artistic expression is a thread that makes us human throughout our diverse cultures. How we create and express beauty is something that we can offer to the world as gifts. This can get lost in today’s world of consumption and profit, where we monetize what we create and produce; items that contribute to a capitalistic economy. Humans have been given a unique gift where we can formulate things with our hands, taking our imaginative minds into places of expression that transform visions and thoughts into masterful creations that feed the soul and the world. The Commons Historically, the commons referred to the way that communities shared and managed land that was held ‘in common’ for the common good of all. This included natural resources such as agricultural fields, grazing lands, waterways, and forests. These resources were known to be extremely precious and of utmost value for the health and welfare of all beings who lived there, including the people, wild and domesticated plants and animals, and the land itself. These commoners used methods of self governance and a shared sense of the common good through relationship building and working together over time to tend to the very place that sustained them. Due to the elite few believing that agricultural systems needed improving to make them more efficient and profitable, the commons were forcibly enclosed and claimed as private property for private use. This deprived commoners of their ancient right to live with and care for the land that had sustained them and their families for generations. With the loss of these lands, there was also a loss of together-as-one connection to the land, chosen mutual obligation, and ancient ways of celebrating life and honoring the stories of the land. These losses have led us to where we are today; disconnected from the land which sustains us, ourselves, and our communities. We have developed individualistic views of success and are no longer rooted in place, with the health and vitality of the land and all inhabitants as our utmost concern. If we are not engaged and connected to the very place in which we live, we will be unable to cultivate community renewal and our storied connection to the land. Our vision of this place includes a rediscovery of the commons. Arriving on this land we knew that there was a calling to create community here. We have invited and opened our doors to others for learning, hands-on experience, and a sharing of knowledge that has helped this place grow and evolve, and in the next phase of this journey, we are envisioning how to embrace and incorporate the philosophy of the commons, where we are deeply embedded and indebted to one another. Insuring the legacy of the work that has been started here, one of our major goals is to create a continuance plan for the future of what has been started here. We believe that by forming a non-profit society with the local community we will build the foundation of a plan to support the farm beyond our time. This will create resilience, diversity, and long term viability for the ways we are growing food and building reciprocal relationships with the land. It is also our intention to have the non-profit society help create the educational programs that will be developed as our continued goal to designate Twisted Roots Farm as a working off-grid permaculture demonstration site for others to learn and gain knowledge in all the aspects of land relationships. Community Resilience The communities that we live in are where our daily lives reside. The expansion of the modern world has eroded the diversity of community, and what defines a community is subject to many factors, especially in the context of how far we can travel or how communities are heavily reliant on external supply chains for their basic needs. In a country as vast as Canada, communities are very different from one another and yet we rely on centralized forms of government to guide our communities. There is a huge disconnect from our community leaders in government to what really matters on a local level, employing cookie cutter approaches as solutions to all communities. The diversity of communities are what constitutes their strengths, and we strongly believe that communities will have to find their own innovative solutions to issues should we have any hope of a healthy future. As a core of community resiliency, localization is a key attribute in creating strong, vibrant, and healthy communities. Our goal as a small local food producer, and education site are about creating circular economies within our community, thereby engaging others to participate in this economy and be part of exploring the strengths within the localization movement. Nature-Based Dialogue Nature-based dialogue speaks to the way we interact and communicate with the more than human world. Our evolution, as with all life forms of this earth, evolved directly with nature. We are not separate from nature, but rather a part of her many life giving systems that contribute to the overall ecological diversity of life on this planet. We must learn to fall in love again with the wild community, and acknowledge that we are not above or wield power over her life-giving systems . Nature-based dialogue is woven throughout many of the programs and ways that we interact with the land here at Twisted Roots Farm. Being immersed in this environment helps to shift our perspective from the mechanized and industrialized ways of living that we have adopted in our cities and larger communities. Learning to build a fire, sleep in the woods, or walk among ancient elder trees offers new ways of being in relationship with nature. Through this interaction, we become aware of life as animate and alive and that we are truly never alone. We are surrounded by a community of mosses, trees, rocks, rivers, all in relationship with each other, of which we can choose to be in conversation with. The more we open ourselves up to this process, the more we start to understand that we are in a mutually beneficial relationship with the wild community. We have a place, an ecological niche within the complex array of life that exists on this planet. There are healing elements and opportunities for personal growth and development rooted in this interaction, something humans would have been in far greater relationship with before our collective disconnect from that which gives us life and sustains our communities in healthy ways. Holistic Learning and Education Since 2018, we have been welcoming people to the farm for work / education exchanges in the form of volunteerism and more in-depth immersion through farm apprenticeships. Our philosophy of holistic learning is based on the premise that each person finds identity, meaning, and purpose in life through connections to their local community, to the natural world, and to humanitarian values such as compassion and peace. We also view learning not exclusively as an exchange between teacher and student, but rather that we all learn together by finding innovative solutions to situations that require input from all those involved, regardless of perceived role. Many of the projects that have been developed and created here at Twisted Roots Farm have been completed by volunteers and apprentices within the context of hands-on experiential learning. We view this site as a learning ground where we are open to new ways of doing things, experimentation, and the exploration of creative expression. Our goal is to continue to expand the educational opportunities that exist at this off-grid permaculture demonstration site so that others can take what they learn here and apply it to their own lives. Through holistic learning, we truly believe that change can manifest in unique ways facilitating a different perspective of how we interact with ourselves, each other, and the living earth.
