loader from loading.io

Persistently Driving a Mobile Vet Clinic With Nicole Irizarry

FarmHouse

Release Date: 03/20/2025

A Love for All Plants and All-Purpose Sheep With Annie Hasz show art A Love for All Plants and All-Purpose Sheep With Annie Hasz

FarmHouse

This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we spoke with Annie Hasz of Broadwing Farm. The Berks County, Pennsylvania, farm started in vegetable production but now focuses on grass-fed lamb for meat and pelts. Hasz also co-runs Rooted Home Herbalism, an annual eight-month course that teaches growing and using herbs. “We achieved our original dream and we grew loads of produce. We sold at farmers markets and through CSA and then more and more to restaurants,” Hasz said. “But I had other interests developing in herbalism. So, as time moved on, things shifted.” Hasz...

info_outline
Merging Farm Life and City Life With Lindsay Eshelman show art Merging Farm Life and City Life With Lindsay Eshelman

FarmHouse

This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we spoke with Lindsay Eshelman of Plow Farms. Eshelman grew up on the Plowville, Pennsylvania, farm that specializes in Christmas trees, and while she still does work with the farm today, she spends much of her time living in New York City. “I’m kind of the leading voice in PR and marketing, and more importantly experience,” Eshelman said. “My role is to bring the experience to the farm and to create this capsule of joy and Christmas that we have.” One of the biggest ways Eshelman creates joy on the farm is its annual ....

info_outline
It's Time to Get Excited About Sheep's Milk Cheese With Julia Inslee show art It's Time to Get Excited About Sheep's Milk Cheese With Julia Inslee

FarmHouse

This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we’re talking to Julia Inslee, owner of Locust Hollow Farm in Coatesville, Pennsylvania. Inslee has lived on the farm since her parents purchased the property in the late 1970s. At the time, it was home to a farmhouse, a few rundown barns and several acres of untended land. Over the next few decades, Inslee’s family transformed the property. In 2010, Inslee started a dairy sheep operation and now raises East Friesians for milk and fiber. “One of the major misconceptions about sheep is that they’re all the same,” Inslee said....

info_outline
Farming Fish Sustainably and Ethically With Brittany Peachey show art Farming Fish Sustainably and Ethically With Brittany Peachey

FarmHouse

This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we’re talking to Brittany Peachey, the aquaculture operations manager at  in Hudson, New York. Peachey’s interest in aquaculture was born from an aquatic biology class in college. After earning her master’s degree in aquaculture nutrition, she came to work at Hudson Valley Fisheries, a fish farm that specializes in sustainably raised steelhead trout. Peachey was recently awarded the New York State Fair Golden Hoof Award, which is given in recognition of outstanding animal care and husbandry. She acknowledges it’s...

info_outline
Celebrating Christmas Trees and Cookies in the Festive FarmHouse show art Celebrating Christmas Trees and Cookies in the Festive FarmHouse

FarmHouse

This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we’re ushering in the holiday season with a special seasonal episode featuring an interview with Kelly Piccioni, Penn State’s Christmas tree-focused Extension educator. Piccioni comes from a family with roots in selling Christmas trees. Her great-grandfather began selling trees he bought off the Orange Car—a railway-side produce stand that opened in Reading, Pennsylvania, in the 1930s. Her grandparents continued the tradition when they bought what is now the family’s Christmas tree farm, Geissler Tree Farms. “Christmas trees...

info_outline
Building Community Through Education With Denise Bosworth show art Building Community Through Education With Denise Bosworth

FarmHouse

This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we’re speaking with Denise Bosworth of Rohrbach’s Farm. Bosworth is part of the farm’s fourth generation and runs the farm market in Columbia County, Pennsylvania. Bosworth and her husband, Dan, returned to the farm in 2013 to begin a new culinary venture, Big Dan’s BBQ. In 2015, Bosworth officially took over the farm market portion of the business and her brother, Mark Rohrbach, took over the farming operation. “I like to say my brother grows the food, Dan cooks the food and I throw the party,” Bosworth said. “We all...

info_outline
Award-Winning Sustainable Farming With Casey Wisch show art Award-Winning Sustainable Farming With Casey Wisch

FarmHouse

This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we’re talking to Casey Wisch, co-owner of  in Lovettsville, Virginia. Wisch’s interest in farming began in college. After graduating, she spent time in New Zealand and Australia where she first encountered permaculture and experienced being part of an agricultural community. When she returned to the U.S., she and her now husband began working toward founding Long Stone Farm. “We wanted to start this grazing operation and we wanted to produce good clean meat for our community, and we wanted to pursue a better path...

info_outline
For the Love of Farming: A 70th Anniversary Special show art For the Love of Farming: A 70th Anniversary Special

FarmHouse

This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we’re honoring the voices of farmers as we celebrate our 70th anniversary. This special podcast episode will feature a variety of voices from farmers and ag industry members who stopped by our pop-up recording studio at this year’s . You’ll hear voices of all ages — from a recent college graduate working her first job in the ag industry to a 92-year-old retired farmer who recalls exactly how his farm community came to his aid when he lost a leg in a farm accident. You’ll even hear from Pennsylvania Ag Secretary Russell...

info_outline
Dare to Return to the Haunted FarmHouse show art Dare to Return to the Haunted FarmHouse

FarmHouse

This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we’re returning to the haunted farmhouse for some seasonal fun and spine-tingling tales from the farm. In this episode, we’ll be sharing four spooky stories that take place on farms or in rural communities because, let’s face it, scary stories from the city just don’t have quite the same chilling effect as those set out in the country. For our first tale, we’ll travel to Robertson County, Tennessee, where the Bell family came to farm in the early 1800s. Unfortunately for the Bells, a spirit that would become known as the...

info_outline
Blending Herbs and Making Tea With Katelyn Melvin show art Blending Herbs and Making Tea With Katelyn Melvin

FarmHouse

This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we’re talking to Katelyn Melvin, owner of . Melvin grows herbs and makes her own herbal tea blends in Sinking Spring, Pennsylvania. Her journey into herb farming started by growing herbs in high school. She later worked on a few vegetable farms and decided to take on farming full time. The farm grows multiple acres of herbs including chamomile, peppermint, lemon balm, anise hyssop and more. The teas are made only with herbs grown on the farm. “All the tea blends come from my love of the fresh herbs,” Melvin said. She has three...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

This week on the FarmHouse, a podcast by Lancaster Farming, we’re talking to Dr. Nicole Irizarry, a large-animal veterinarian who owns Kissel Hill Veterinary Services in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.

Irizarry opened her own mobile vet practice in the fall of 2023 after working in a large-animal group practice for seven years.

She currently serves clients in about a 25-mile radius with most of her clients being horse owners. She also works on cows, sheep and goats, plus a few other species like donkeys and mini cattle.

“I definitely used to have a favorite species,” Irizarry said. “Now I really don’t know that I do. I like different things about the different species.”

In recent years, there has been a shortage of large animal veterinarians. Since studying at Penn State and Cornell, Irizarry knew she wanted to work on the large animal side, and many of her classmates initially did as well.

“I think there’s a little bit more of a problem with retention than recruitment,” Irizarry said.

The lack of a work-life balance and the demand for being on call can often lead to burnout in the large-animal field.

While Irizarry lists business hours on her website, she often has days where she isn’t home until after 9 p.m.

“For (my work-life balance) I am never a 50-50 split,” Irizarry said. “I am either 100% or 90% in on my business. Those things are fine with me. I think it is what I signed up for. For some people it would be a step too far, and that’s totally fine.”

Irizarry didn’t grow up in agriculture, but she grew up always wanting to be a vet. She graduated vet school in a class of 100 — 82 of whom were women.

Of the women in the class, 11 went into a career with food animals, but only three — including Irizarry — are still active in that field.

“I am still here,” Irizarry said. “I am persistent about being in this area, in this profession, as a veterinarian that works in a broader agricultural community.”