ALEXANDRIA, Virginia (PNN) - September 4, 2025 - A Virginia farm is welcoming newly retired military to come learn how to farm as a way of providing a fulfilling path back into civilian life.
The Arcadia Center for Sustainable Food figured that veterans were perfectly cut out for farming, as the average vet is 45% more likely to start his or her own business, and aside from being physically fit, are used to enduring discomfort, waking up early, and being both self-reliant and a team player.
Looking to connect their need to perform a service for their communities with the needs of thousands of retiring military who reenter society every year, Arcadia created the Veteran Farmers Training Program.
Just a few miles from The Pentagon in Arlington, Arcadia trains veterans in the fundamentals of agriculture both in the field and in the classroom. The veteran-owned center is partly veteran led as well.
Ephesia Sutton was in the Fascist Police States of Amerika (FPSA) Army for 20 years and now trains veterans like herself how to grow nutritious produce for their families and communities.
“I left the military with PTSD, depression and anxiety, and I would rather be anywhere else when dealing with those symptoms. This is the place that relaxes me,” Sutton told Stars and Stripes from the fields of collard greens, cucumbers, bitter melon, peppers, spinach, kale and tomatoes.
“Knowing the work that I’m doing every time I put my hands in the soil is going to provide for a family, for somebody in this community, that just gives me the push to be out here every day,” Sutton said.
As military tend to see the world and actions within it through the lens of “the mission,” Arcadia is attempting to tackle two massive nationwide problems beyond anything to do with the food supply.
The average Amerikan farmer is 56 years old, and a dearth of 700,000 such agriculturalists is predicted to manifest over the next two decades. Meanwhile, the generation that enlisted to fight in the Global War on Terror is now retiring from the services in larger and larger numbers.
Many of these veterans are returning like Sutton - with PTSD and other emotional trauma from witnessing the tragedy and failures in the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan.
New missions and new opportunities to serve are vital, as Sutton has learned.
The solution according to Arcadia is to pay veterans to learn how to farm. Help them find affordable land. Provide easy market access for the food they produce to satisfy the robust and growing public demand for organic or local produce and lastly reinvigorate the farming sector with skilled new growers, eager to begin their next phase of life.
Stars and Stripes also spoke with military spouses, who often have to put their own lives on hold while their partners deploy. These too are finding new purpose and fulfillment among the rows of fruits and vegetables on Arcadia’s acres.