The Central Park Farms Podcast ā Details, episodes & analysis
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The Central Park Farms Podcast
Kendall Ballantine
Frequency: 1 episode/30d. Total Eps: 6

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Apple Podcasts
šØš¦ Canada - food
26/02/2026#93šØš¦ Canada - food
25/02/2026#74šØš¦ Canada - food
24/02/2026#47š¬š§ Great Britain - food
18/10/2025#92š¬š§ Great Britain - food
17/10/2025#65šØš¦ Canada - food
28/09/2025#84šØš¦ Canada - food
27/09/2025#65šØš¦ Canada - food
26/09/2025#35šØš¦ Canada - food
29/08/2025#67
Spotify
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See allRSS feed quality and score
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See allScore global : 57%
Publication history
Monthly episode publishing history over the past years.
The Importance of Prepared Foods
Season 1 Ā· Episode 3
vendredi 22 août 2025 ⢠Duration 12:34
In this episode of The Central Park Farms Podcast, Iām diving into why we started offering prepared foods at the farm, and why theyāve become a key part of what we do.
You might have grabbed a chicken pot pie or a container of chili from the freezer without giving it too much thought. But what you might not know is that those chef-made meals are doing a lot more than saving time in your kitchen. They help us reduce food waste, keep our prices stable, and ensure we use the whole animal in a way that honours the animals we raise.
Iāll also share how our partnership with Chef Adrian got started, how we make the most of every cut, and how prepared foods support our bigger mission: providing good, local food in a way that works for real life.
- How prepared meals help reduce food waste on the farm
- Why they support our pricing and whole-animal use
- The role of "ugly cuts" and byproducts in farm operations
- How our chef partnership startedāand where it's going next
- Why this isnāt just about convenience (though it is convenient!)
Stocking your freezer with our shepherdās pie or split pea and ham soup? Youāre not just saving time, youāre helping us honour the animals, reduce waste, and keep our pricing sustainable.
Subscribe to the podcast and share it with a friend who supports local food!
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Resources & Links:
The Trouble with Tariffs
Season 1 Ā· Episode 2
vendredi 22 août 2025 ⢠Duration 30:10
In this episode of The Central Park Farms Podcast, Iām digging into something thatās been weighing heavy on our farm lately: how cross-border tariffs and trade politics are quietly affecting small, local farms like ours, even when weāre only selling within a short drive of Langley.
I share how changes in the US-Canada trade relationship disrupted a long-standing part of our business and why that shift hit us harder than expected. We also get into the ripple effect tariffs have on things like packaging, feed, tractor parts, and even the work I do outside of the farm through Marketing for Farmers.
This episode isnāt about policy debates or economic theory, itās about the real-life impact of far-away decisions on the day-to-day of local farms like ours.
Key Takeaways:- Why our quail business disappeared almost overnight
- How trade issues affect farm supplies like hay, packaging, and parts
- The financial pressure of shrinking margins on small farms
- The unexpected impact on Kendallās off-farm income
- Why financial sustainability is just as important as environmental sustainability
- How customers can support farms in ways beyond just buying meat
If this gave you a new perspective on how interconnected farming really is, Iād love for you to hit Subscribe and leave a quick review. Even better? Share this episode with a friend who cares about supporting local food. Your support truly means the world. š
How We Got Here
Season 1 Ā· Episode 1
vendredi 22 août 2025 ⢠Duration 27:10
Welcome to the first episode of The Central Park Farms Podcast! I'm Kendall, one half of the team behind the farm, and in this episode, Iām pulling back the curtain on how all of this got started.
Itās a story that begins with a corporate job I didnāt love, a new relationship with a guy who grew up farming (hi Jay š), and a surprise delivery of 500 chicks. What was supposed to be a little homesteading project quickly turned into something much bigger⦠and a lot messier.
This podcast isnāt about teaching you how to farm. Itās about sharing real stories from our life on the farm ā how we got here, what weāve learned, and what itās like raising food for families like yours.
If youāve ever bought from us, followed along on Instagram, or just care about where your food comes from, this space is for you. Iām so glad youāre here.
Key Takeaways:
- Why we decided to start a podcast for our farm community
- The (accidental) start of Central Park Farms
- Kendallās journey from office job to raising chickens
- What you can expect from future episodes
- Why this podcast is more about connection than farming advice
š§ Subscribe so you never miss a new episode, and thanks for supporting our family farm in this new way.
Connect with Us:
Resources & Links
Getting Back To Our Roots
Season 1 Ā· Episode 4
jeudi 4 septembre 2025 ⢠Duration 26:57
In this episode, Iām pulling back the curtain on something thatās been taking up a lot of headspace latelyāour new-to-us farm store and what it really means for the future of Central Park Farms.
This isnāt a flashy āgrand openingā kind of story. Itās a story about getting back to what made this farm special in the first place: connecting with the people we feed. Iām talking about how our farm store journey has evolved through tiny beginnings, COVID pivots, and now, a big olā barn thatās full of possibility.
Weāll chat about:
- Why we didnāt build a million-dollar store
- What weāre prioritizing instead (spoiler: itās not branded freezer packaging)
- How this new space will help us serve our customers and other local farmers
- The return of something Iāve deeply missed: in-person connection through food
Plus, youāre getting the first-ever sneak peek into a new offering weāre launching soonāthe Seasonal Supper Club. If youāve ever wished for more farm-to-table moments, this oneās for you.
Come hang out with me while I get real about the emotional and practical journey behind this next chapter.
Key Takeaways:- The new farm store isnāt about āfancyā, itās about function, community, and values
- Weāre expanding to support more local food security, not just sales
- Cooking classes and intimate farm dinners are coming back
- Behind every pork chop and package is a commitment to keeping food affordable and meaningful
Be the first to know about our Seasonal Supper Club
Want to be part of something special? Join the waitlist for our brand new Seasonal Supper Club and enjoy intimate, seasonal dinners at the farm. Click here to join the waitlist.
Subscribe to the podcast and share it with a friend who supports local food!
Connect with us:
The American Billionaire Taking Over BC Ranches
Season 1 Ā· Episode 5
lundi 15 septembre 2025 ⢠Duration 13:12
In this episode, Iām digging into something that struck a nerve, not just with me, but with so many of you who messaged after I posted about our drive through Douglas Lake Ranch.
This isnāt just about one beautiful, historic ranch in British Columbia. Itās about who owns our farmland, and what that means for the future of food, farming, and financial sustainability in Canada.
Iām sharing what Iāve learned about the foreign ownership of Canadaās largest cattle ranch, the loopholes in our provincial policies, and why this hits so close to home for me, as someone farming leased land and trying to build something lasting.
Weāll chat about:
- The billionaire U.S. owner of Douglas Lake Ranch (and his surprising connection to Walmart)
- Why BC is seeing more foreign land ownership than other provinces
- What this means for Canadian farmers, Indigenous rights, and food security
- The difference between buying farmland for passion vs. profit
- Why I believe this topic deserves more national attention and legal reform
This episode is short but important, and Iād love to hear your take. Are we doing enough to protect our farmland and food systems?
Key Takeaways:
- Douglas Lake Ranch is owned by a foreign billionaire with deep ties to U.S. corporate wealth
- BC currently has no cap on how many acres can be purchased by foreign interests
- Foreign ownership could have long-term effects on food security and local economies
- We need federal standards and public conversations about protecting farmland
Letās Keep the Conversation Going
Have thoughts on this? I want to hear them. DM me on Instagram @CentralParkFarms or reply to our newsletter. Your voice matters.
Resources Mentioned
Douglas Lake Ranch Website ā Learn more about the ranchās history and ownership.
Behind the Scenes of Our Biggest (and Scariest) Business Move Yet
Season 1 Ā· Episode 6
mardi 20 janvier 2026 ⢠Duration 39:51
In todayās episode, Iām taking you behind the scenes of what it really looked like to open our brand new farm store. Spoiler: it wasnāt easy. What started as a simple need for a bigger walk-in freezer turned into a full-on construction project⦠and it tested us in every single way.
From convincing myself it was actually a good idea to saying yes to my father-in-lawās offer (after years of saying no), to doing most of the build ourselves, to nearly failing inspection because the water stopped working 30 minutes before the inspector showed up⦠yeah. Itās been a ride.
Hereās what I share in this episode:
- Why I resisted this expansion for so long and what finally made me change my mind
- The messy (and expensive) middle of building something new while still running an already-busy business
- The impact this move has had on our farm, from delivery slowdowns to staffing shifts to record-breaking grand opening sales
- What Iāve learned about trusting my gut, making scary financial decisions, and remembering why we built this space in the first place
If youāre in a season where youāre growing, stretching, or just trying to make it work with what youāve got, I hope this episode encourages you. Because yeah, itās hardābut itās also so worth it.
Hit follow so you donāt miss future episodes, weāve got some exciting farm store updates (and hard lessons) still to come.

