The Ferngully Touch Property Restoration

The Ferngully Touch Property Restoration Got property that needs a lift?There’s a lot of value in spending more time at home. We can help in all aspects. Does your landscape need a makeover? Today!

Call us, when you really need to get your money's worth. for the home YOU live in or an investment you want to add value to? WE can help you with:
Security- curb appeal
with someone coming and going on a regular basis, break-in and vandalism is minimized
New lawns
Tree and shrub pruning or replacement where needed
Weed removal and cleanup
Colorful plantings for refreshing, easy-to-maintain landsca

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Pool, hot tub, fire pit? Create an outdoor room everyone will always want to be in. How about a living hedges or screen for an outside room that needs a lift? Hanging gardens, vertical gardens, edible landscaping? the gourmet stuff is growing right in the back yard! Sprinkler repair
Call us to find out how you can get started.

05/10/2026

Do you have them in your home?

04/25/2026

Now You know . Eat the cabbage you cooked with a bit of butter and a dash of vinegar. And you can grow the root end of the cabbage in your garden into a new plant. Cool huh?

Great idea!!!
03/09/2026

Great idea!!!

01/31/2026

Beside, this looks terrific.

It's harvest time. Enjoy the feasting with your favorite crowd!
09/07/2025

It's harvest time. Enjoy the feasting with your favorite crowd!

Just plant the seeds! Youll be amazed what grows! https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1JUPyodqQi/?mibextid=wwXIfr
09/07/2025

Just plant the seeds! Youll be amazed what grows!
https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1JUPyodqQi/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Every Tuesday I found a boy’s crumpled homework in my trash. One night, he told me farmers were worthless—like me.

I’ve lived seventy-two years on this patch of dirt. My name’s Ray. Folks around here call me “the old farmer with the broken barn,” and that’s fair enough. My wife’s gone, my kids grown, and most days it’s just me, the cows, and this stubborn land that refuses to quit.

What people don’t know is that, for months, I’ve been finding someone else’s life tossed into my feed sacks and trash barrel. Crumpled notebooks. Torn math worksheets. English essays with red F’s bleeding across the page. At first I thought it was just wind carrying scraps from the school down the road. Then I noticed the same handwriting, always scrawled in anger:

“I’m dumb.”

“Nobody cares.”

“School is useless.”

It punched a hole in my chest every time. Because once upon a time, I was that kid. Teachers said my hands were good for milking cows, not holding pencils. My father said, “Brains don’t grow corn.” And I believed him, until it was too late.

One night, I caught him. The boy. Standing by my shed under the security light, clutching another ripped page. His name was Tommy, the neighbor kid, twelve years old, freckles and too-big sneakers.

“What are you doing with my trash?” I barked, trying not to scare him.

He flinched but snapped back: “It’s not trash, it’s my homework. Dad says I’ll end up like you anyway—digging dirt, nothing to show for it.”

I froze. Like me. Worthless. Dirt.

I didn’t yell. I didn’t chase him off. I just let him run, his voice echoing long after he was gone.

That night I sat at the table with an old seed bag beside me. Pulled out a Sharpie. Wrote on the back:

“This seed looks useless. But give it sun, water, time—it feeds the world. Don’t throw yourself away.”

I tucked the note and a handful of kernels into the barrel where he always left his papers. Felt foolish, like a farmer writing fairy tales to the night.

Next day, it was gone.

The following week, there was another sheet in the barrel. Math problems, half-wrong. At the bottom, written in shaky pencil: “How can a seed be smart?”

I grinned. Wrote back: “Fractions are seeds too. Slice a pie into 4. Eat 1, that’s 1/4. Even a farmer knows that.”

And so it began. A secret exchange. Him throwing broken pieces of himself into my trash. Me sending them back stitched with hope.

He confessed he couldn’t spell “because.” I circled it and wrote: “You spelled it right this time. Keep going.”

He said his dad called farmers dumb. I scribbled: “My dirt puts food on his table. Dumb don’t do that.”

Week by week, his words softened. He started signing them: “Tommy.” And one day, tucked beside the page, was a candy wrapper folded into the shape of a star.

But secrets don’t stay buried long in small towns.

His father stormed over one Saturday, red-faced, fists like hammers. “You stay the hell out of my boy’s head! He don’t need farmer nonsense. School’s already enough of a joke without you filling him with lies.”

I didn’t raise my voice. Just said: “Your boy’s not broken. He just needs someone to believe it.”

That was enough. He spat at the dirt and left.

It should’ve ended there. But the next week, another note showed up in the barrel. Shakier handwriting, but determined:

“He says you’re wrong. But I think seeds are smart. Because they don’t give up, even in bad soil.”

My throat burned. The boy was fighting for himself now.

Months passed. Then, in spring, the school held a parent night. I wasn’t planning to go—farmers don’t belong in classrooms—but one of the teachers, Mrs. Carter, stopped by my gate.

“You should come,” she said gently. “There’s something you’ll want to hear.”

So I went. Sat in the back with dirt still under my nails, trying to disappear into the folding chair.

They had the kids read essays aloud. When Tommy’s turn came, he walked to the front, clutching a paper. His voice shook but carried across the gym:

“My hero is Farmer Ray. He taught me that seeds look small, but they feed the world. He taught me that being smart isn’t just about grades—it’s about not giving up. He taught me farmers aren’t dumb. They’re the reason we eat. When I grow up, I want to be both: a student, and a man who works the land.”

The room went silent. His father stared at the floor. The teacher wiped her eyes. And me? I sat in the back, fists pressed to my knees, trying not to break apart.

Afterward, Tommy slipped me a folded page. Inside was a drawing: a stalk of corn with roots tangled deep, and next to it a boy holding a book. Underneath, one line: “Thank you for seeing me.”

I walked home under the stars, his words heavier than any sack of feed I’d ever carried.

People think changing the world takes money, degrees, or power. Truth is, sometimes it takes nothing more than a stubborn farmer and a few scribbled notes in the trash.

Tommy doesn’t know everything yet. Neither do I. But we both know this: seeds grow when someone bothers to plant them.

And kids? They’re the most important crop we’ll ever tend.

So before you dismiss a farmer, or a janitor, or anyone who works with their hands—remember: without us, the world starves. And before you dismiss a kid struggling with fractions—remember: they just need one person to believe.

I believed. And now he believes.

That’s how you grow a future. One seed. One boy. One note at a time.

Fall is fast approaching, but you don't have to wait! And I would put the pot on the stove and then add the water, not s...
07/29/2025

Fall is fast approaching, but you don't have to wait!
And I would put the pot on the stove and then add the water, not so heavy! Enjoy enjoy!

Learn how to make apple cider from scratch! It is very easy and I do this every fall. So delicious!🔔𝐃𝐨𝐧'𝐭 𝐟𝐨𝐫𝐠𝐞𝐭 𝐭𝐨 𝐬𝐮𝐛𝐬𝐜𝐫𝐢𝐛𝐞 𝐭𝐨 𝐦𝐲...

You can do this, no matter where you live! And if you have to move midseason, you can take them with you!
05/05/2025

You can do this, no matter where you live! And if you have to move midseason, you can take them with you!

A fun way to get more veggies into your diet.
04/07/2025

A fun way to get more veggies into your diet.

Address

West Jordan, UT
84088

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 8pm
Tuesday 8am - 8pm
Wednesday 8am - 8pm
Thursday 8am - 8pm
Friday 8am - 8pm
Saturday 8am - 8pm

Telephone

+18016373704

Website

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