Skip to Main Content

MPT’s Maryland Farm & Harvest Visits Baltimore and Frederick Counties and Baltimore City During January 19 Episode

Peaches at Scenic View Orchards in Sabillasville (Frederick County). Photo credit: Maryland Public Television’s Maryland Farm & Harvest.

ANNAPOLIS, MD – Maryland Public Television’s (MPT) popular original series Maryland Farm & Harvest, now in its eighth season, will feature farms and locations in Baltimore and Frederick counties and Baltimore City during a new episode airing on Tuesday, January 19 at 7 p.m.

Maryland Farm & Harvest takes viewers on a journey across the state, telling stories about the farms, people, and technology required to sustain and grow Maryland agriculture – the state’s number one commercial industry.

With introductions filmed at First Fruits Farm in Freeland, Baltimore County, Maryland Farm & Harvest’s January 19 episode features the following segments: 

  • Farm Firewood is a Blazing Success (Baltimore County). When father and son, Scott and Roman Braglio, of Braglio Farms in Randallstown started selling unwanted trees as firewood, neither could have predicted how popular their business would become. The family operation has grown significantly, and they now turn out loads of wood to keep Maryland homes warm each winter. Find out how firewood is cleaned, dried, and packed in this segment. Also, see how some firewood even makes it under the grill at the Braglio’s farm-to-table restaurant, The Woodstock Inn.

  • Ask a Farmer: How Did You Start Farming? In this new segment, Maryland Farm & Harvest producers interview a variety of farmers from across the state who share their stories about how they got into the business of agriculture. Viewers will meet farmers from Hurlock, Ridgley, White Hall, Gaithersburg, Oakland, and Westminster.

  • Immigrant Family Brews Mead with Maryland Peaches (Frederick County). When Andrzej Wilk’s family immigrated to the United States from Poland in the 1990s, they noticed a favorite beverage from their homeland was hard to find here: a fermented honey drink called mead. The family decided to start making their own mead and founded Orchid Cellar Meadery and Winery in Middletown. On the day Maryland Farm & Harvest stopped by, Andrzej was brewing a batch of mead using fresh peaches from Scenic View Orchards in Sabillasville. The segment includes a visit to the fruit farm to see how peaches add a fresh taste to this classic beverage.

  • The Local Buy: City-Hydro (Baltimore City). Segment host Al Spoler heads indoors and learns how Larry and Johanna Hountz grow all their crops in one room at City-Hydro in Baltimore. This vertical growing operation in a Fells Point row house produces 85 varieties of microgreens, which supply local restaurants and farmers markets. A former cybersecurity consultant, Larry is now all in on indoor farming and even produces and sells vertical farming kits to people across the country interested in starting their own operations. A recipe using fresh vegetables and microgreens will be available at mpt.org/farm

New episodes of Maryland Farm & Harvest air on Tuesdays at 7 p.m. on MPT-HD and are live-streamed on MPT’s website. The newest episode will be re-broadcasted on MPT-HD Thursdays at 11 p.m. and Sundays at 6 a.m. and on MPT2/Create® on Fridays at 7:30 p.m.

All past episodes can be viewed at MPT’s website. Specific segments can be found on Maryland Farm & Harvest’s YouTube channel.

Nearly 10 million viewers have tuned in to Maryland Farm & Harvest since its 2013 debut. The series has taken MPT viewers to more than 360 farms, fisheries, and other agriculture-related locations during its first seven seasons, covering every Maryland county, as well as Baltimore City and Washington, D.C. 

The Maryland Department of Agriculture is MPT’s co-production partner for Maryland Farm & Harvest. Major funding is provided by the Maryland Grain Producers Utilization Board.

Additional funding is provided by Maryland’s Best, Maryland Agricultural Resource-Based Industry Development Corporation (MARBIDCO), MidAtlantic Farm Credit, Rural Maryland Council, Maryland Agricultural Education and Rural Development Assistance Fund (MAERDAF), Maryland Soybean Board, Maryland Association of Soil Conservation Districts, Wegmans Food Markets, Maryland Nursery, Landscape & Greenhouse Association, Seafood Marketing Advisory Commission, Maryland Farm Bureau, and The Keith Campbell Foundation for the Environment.

Other support comes from the Mar-Del Watermelon Association, Eddie Mercer Agri-Services, Inc., and the Maryland Agricultural Education Foundation (MAEF).

###

Follow Maryland Department of Agriculture on Twitter @MdAgDept


Contact Information

If you have any questions, need additional information or would like to arrange an interview, please contact:
Jessica Hackett
Director of Communications
Telephone: 410-841-5888

doit-ewspw-W01