The 1,300-acre Carter & Stevens Farm in Barre, Massachusetts is a 5th-generation family dairy farm that has been milking cows and producing raw milk everyday since 1938.








Photographs taken with a bridge camera journaling nature and everyday life in Central Massachusetts and beyond.
The 1,300-acre Carter & Stevens Farm in Barre, Massachusetts is a 5th-generation family dairy farm that has been milking cows and producing raw milk everyday since 1938.








Love the stonework… must be delicious beef!
Grass fed, of course. 😉
Love the rock cow statue. Looks like a good place to visit.
Ice cream and/or beer in the summer, as well as meat and veg. What could be better? 😉
Wow! Wonderful photo and place!
Thank’s for share Julie.
Always love to “visit” you online, Elvira!
It’s a pleasure your visit “online” Julie, please enjoy a cup or tea or coffee and some cake. Feel free to take photos ☺️ Thank you!
Have a wonderful weekend!
Someone had fun making that cow. I wonder what came first — the farm or the stone sculpture.
Love the sculpture…and I actually love cows too. As a child I willingly visited my grandfather’s stable.
My grandparents had a farm when I was a kid, as well!
I, too, love that stone cow.
Creative!
It’s a fun place to visit!
Really fun photos, Julie, of the Stone Cow dairy farm and environs. Lovely windmill and I especially appreciated the work and ingenuity of the stone cow.
Thanks, Jet. It’s a local attraction around here, for sure!
It looks like a beautiful farm and a good place to spend a few hours. I also love the stone sculpture of the cow.
Just curious–do you drink raw milk? It gets so much bad press from most health experts, but we have several friends who drink nothing but raw milk.
It is a fun place, and a local agricultural hot spot.
I don’t drink raw milk, either. In Massachusetts, raw milk has to be labeled with a warning, and must be consumed within a short time. Too much of a worry for me!
A lot of people swear by it, but I don’t know if it’s worth the risk.