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College Farm


Sometimes building a cleaner future starts with getting your hands dirty



College Farm

Dickinson’s College Farm is an 80-acre, USDA-certified organic farm and a living laboratory where students can gain distinctive, hands-on learning experiences.

Student employees, graduate apprentices and volunteers are involved in all aspects of food production and research. Students in a wide variety of disciplines learn about renewable energy and sustainable agriculture through workshops and volunteering opportunities. On-site classes and independent research projects give students unique insights into complex mathematics, the role of food in global politics, public art projects, Buddhist philosophies and more.

The farm provides food to the campus and local community. The majority of the harvest is sold to the campus Dining Hall, with a significant portion earmarked for the farm’s Campus Supported Agriculture (CSA) program, a May-December produce subscription that feeds more than 155 members and their families. The College Farm also supplies Farm Works with fresh, organic veggies to be used in the vegan and gluten-free soups and salads made daily. 

The farm also sells produce through a bountiful stand at Carlisle’s thriving weekly farmers’ market and donates thousands of pounds of fresh produce to a local food bank, Project SHARE.

Through our education and outreach efforts, the farm serves as a venue for the Dickinson community and its neighbors to experience a holistic approach to land stewardship rooted in management practices that work to sustain the natural environment.


Farm Works Online

We're so thrilled to announce Farm Works online! We hope you will visit the ! 

Learn more about our campus farm store here and visit us at 169 West High Street, Carlisle. 



Governor Shapiro Visits Biodigester at ºìÐÓÖ±²¥app Farm

Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro visited the ºìÐÓÖ±²¥app Farm to see the innovative biodigester project, which is turning farm and food waste into green energy. Food waste and manure are fed into the anerobic digester creating biogas, which can be used for cooking, heating and generating electricity. ºìÐÓÖ±²¥app Farm's energy & livestock manager Matt Steiman says the new digester will process the manure from the neighbor’s 150 dairy cows plus two tons of food waste every day.  The project will generate enough renewable energy to power the farm and will export additional energy to power 30 homes. The project will also reduce water pollution to local streams and the Chesapeake Bay.