Minnesota Prairie Roots

Writing and photography by Audrey Kletscher Helbling

Tulip time at Brand Farms, rural Farmington May 6, 2026

Atop the hillside of tulips, an “I love tulips” photo backdrop. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)

ROWS OF TULIPS curve across a hillside at Brand Farms in Dakota County, splashing color into the agrarian landscape. Vivid red and bright yellow. Softer pinks. Multi-hued flowers of orange and yellow, purple and white. And more.

Photographed while riding on the wagon, a partial view of the tulip field below, a flower shed and a bounce pad. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)
So many beautiful tulips in assorted hues. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)
Tulip rows curve next to a farm field. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)

The colorful tulips contrast with the dark soil of a bare field and the sometimes cloudy sky in a land awakening to spring.

Approaching Brand Farms, 18605 Biscayne Avenue, Farmington. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)

Here, along a dusty gravel road northeast of Farmington, the Brands welcome visitors to their first annual Tulip Festival, featuring 36 tulip varieties—160,000 tulip bulbs from the Netherlands—planted on three acres of this fourth-generation family farm.

Guests are transported to and from the tulip field on a tractor-drawn wagon. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)

Days after the tulip fest opened, Randy and I met our eldest daughter at the farm, climbed onto a tractor-drawn wagon, settled onto straw bales and bumped our way out to the tulip field, the driver narrating information about the farm along the way.

I felt comfortably at home with this scene of barn, silo and tractor. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)

This is a working crop, dairy and chicken farm, also with an apple orchard, a farm market, community supported agriculture (CSA) and side crops of flowers, sunflowers and pumpkins. The Brands have diversified into agri-tourism with events like tulip and sunflower festivals, apple and pumpkin picking. We’ve been here previously in autumn with the two oldest grandkids and their parents.

One of many photo props. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)

On this weekday afternoon, mostly adults wandered the tulip field. A strong wind whipped across the rolling hills as we meandered, photographed—there are lots of fun photo props—took in the breathtaking beauty of blooms. Some 40 percent of the tulips had not yet opened. Weather always factors in to farming.

Farm hopper pigs, cows and horses for the littlest guests to ride. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)
Shoes dropped outside the bin where kids play in corn. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)
Another activity: shooting baskets against a gravity wagon backdrop. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)

Even for kids who may not be all that interested in looking at tulips, this festival offers plenty of activities like a mountain of straw bales to scale; plastic farm animals to hop on; a giant pad to bounce upon; basketballs to sink; a bin of shelled corn to play in; and more.

My favorite hue of tulips. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)

There’s a farm food truck, too, vending walking tacos, beverages, ice cream treats and such. From 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Saturday, May 9, Prairie Potluck brings live music to the Tulip Festival. Weekends can get especially busy here with families.

Out in the open, rolling hills, tulips spread across three acres. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)

Festival aside, as someone who grew up on a southwestern Minnesota dairy and crop farm, I appreciate the opportunity to reconnect with my rural roots here. It’s not often anymore that I set foot upon a working farm. And when I do, I realize how much agriculture still means to me decades removed from rural life.

One of the pastured cows grazes next to the farm site. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)

While at Brand Farms, I longed to pet the calves, but had to settle for taking photos of the Holsteins. I realize the Brands can’t have people poking around everywhere. They offer just enough exposure to farm life to inform and educate with scheduled educational tours as another option.

Tulips in the U-pick patch. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)
A basket of shears for guests to grab and cut their own tulips. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)
A beautiful arrangement of tulips in the U-pick shed. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)

Once we returned from the tulip field to the farm site and I photographed the cows and calves, we walked through the farm store before heading to the U-pick tulip patch. Planted at the bottom of a hill and semi-sheltered from the wind, the tulips bloomed more color into Brand Farms.

Guests walk among the tulips in widely-spaced rows. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)
Pre-cut fresh tulips are for sale. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)
Guests check in and/or buy tickets, right, before heading to the tulip field. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted file photo May 2026)

It’d been a delightful 1½ hours on this family farm, originally purchased in 1957 by German immigrants, Anton and Marie Brand. Today their great grandson, Aaron/”Farmer Aaron” farms here with his father. For a farm to remain in the family for four generations is worth celebrating, just as tulips are on a cool and windy afternoon in early May.

Syrup is among the offerings in the farm store, which was open during the festival. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo May 2026)

FYI: The Tulip Festival is open daily from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. until around May 24. Check before heading to the farm as weather could impact the end date. There is an admission price. The farm is located at 18605 Biscayne Avenue, rural Farmington. The Brand Barn store is open daily from 7 a.m.-7 p.m. selling farm-fresh eggs, meats, apples and more.

© Copyright 2026 Audrey Kletscher Helbling

 

An afternoon at a southern Minnesota pumpkin patch October 18, 2023

Minnesota is known for its beautiful fall colors, although 2023 colors were not as brilliant as previous autumns due to drought and temps. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo September 2021)

DURING THESE FINAL DAYS of October, when the sun blazes warmth into crisp days and leaves fall and pumpkins lie exposed in fields, vines withered, there’s a rush to pack in final autumn fun. And I did just that Sunday afternoon at Larson’s Bridgewater Farm on the northwest edge of Northfield.

Pumpkins galore, not at Bridgewater farm, but at a southern Minnesota apple orchard. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted file photo October 2021)

Here, on this working farm turned pumpkin patch destination, Randy and I joined our eldest and her family, among many multi-generational families focused on an experience that certainly beats picking pumpkins from a retail store display. This is all about connecting to each other and to the land. And this is all about building memories that remain long after the last pumpkin has gone into the compost pile.

A barrel train heads toward the pole shed, aside the corn maze at Bridgewater Farm. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2023)

I observed so many smiles, so much joy, so much exuberance. I remember thinking, as I cozied next to my daughter Amber at the back of a flatbed wagon pulled by a John Deere tractor, that life doesn’t get much better than this. Here we were, strangers crammed onto wagon benches, bumping around the farm, past the cattle and pole sheds and cornfields under a clear, sunny October sky. It was as if nothing existed beyond this acreage. I felt overwhelming peace, a surge of serenity in the simplicity of the moment.

Randy and I pose next to the old John Deere tractor. (Photo credit: Amber Schmidt)

Perhaps my farm background factored into my personal reaction. The sight of dried cornfields, the scent of manure, the fenced beef cattle and calves (especially the calves), the stacked hay bales, the tread of tractor tires embedded in mud, the old John Deere tractor (a photo op backdrop), all proved nostalgically uplifting.

Among several fun photo cut-outs in Bridgewater Farm’s Photo Alley. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2023)

I doubt my grandchildren noticed any of this, except perhaps the barnyard smell. Izzy, 7, and Isaac, 4, were too busy enjoying the many kid-based activities offered at Bridgewater Farm. Twice they rode the barrel train that looped through a machine shed holding hay, past the livestock and then back. They climbed weathered bales stacked high, slides zooming them back to ground level. They twisted through the kids’ corn maze with us, their parents later following the more challenging adult version, which the grandparents opted out of to oversee the kids as they climbed the haystacks once again and then moved on to the corn box.

Ripened corn. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted file photo 2018)

The kids’ hands-down favorite seemed to be the corn pit, where they shoveled kernels, filled pails, covered themselves in corn. Again, memories rushed back. Not of playing in shelled corn. But of decades ago farm work, of pushing wheelbarrows full of ground corn down the barn aisle to feed the cows. My grandchildren will never know that rural life, only the stories I share with them of yesteryear, of when Grandma was growing up on the farm.

A goat on a family member’s farm, similar to one at Bridgewater Farm. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted file photo 2018)

I enticed them to pet the silky ear of a goat before we headed away from the fenced goats and sheep to take posed photos at the seasonally-themed photo cut-outs. I didn’t take many photos during our afternoon outing, choosing to enjoy being in the moment without the distraction of photography. I left my 35mm camera at home. Intentionally. The daughter snapped plenty of images with her cellphone.

Izzy, especially tall for her age, and her brother check their height at Bridgewater Farm. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted photo October 2023)

When we pedaled kid-sized and adult-sized tricycles (yes, me and the other adults, too, except for the too-tall son-in-law) around the trike race track, I remembered a black-and-white photo taken of me as a teen riding my youngest brother’s trike on my childhood farm, long legs bent awkwardly to the side, broad smile across my face. I smiled just as wide at Bridgewater Farm, my long legs bent awkwardly as I raced after my granddaughter peddling with her long legs bent awkwardly.

A field of pumpkins photographed in southern Minnesota in 2022. (Minnesota Prairie Roots copyrighted file photo September 2022)

Soon the grandkids were pulling a wagon to the pumpkin patch. And when they weren’t looking, Grandpa scooted on and the pulling halted and they turned to see us all laughing. Eventually we found just the right pumpkins hefted from the pumpkin patch, weighed and then loaded into the car.

What a fun-filled afternoon on the farm—one of nostalgia for me, but more importantly of experiencing simple joys with my family. And it all started with the kids wanting to go to a pumpkin patch.

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FYI: Pumpkin patch season is winding down in Minnesota. Bridgewater Farm is offering special MEA hours this Thursday and Friday from noon to 5 pm. Otherwise the farm is open only on weekends, October 28-29 being the final weekend with hours from 11 am – 6 pm. Admission to the pumpkin patch is free with a $10/person cost for all activities, excluding apple cannon shooting. That costs an additional fee. Pumpkins are sold both pick-your-own or pre-picked.

TELL ME: Do you have a favorite pumpkin patch in Minnesota or elsewhere. Let’s hear where and why it’s a favorite.

© Copyright 2023 Audrey Kletscher Helbling