Gendron Ranch - Living History Museum

Gendron Ranch - Living History Museum The GR - Living History Museum is in the initial stages of creation will open to the public in the near future. The Ranch is located 4 miles east of Yakima.

The O.J. Gendron Hop Ranch is currently a two acre parcel surrounded by hops on three sides. It was once a much larger family ranch of 120 acres that went from Beaudry Rd. to nearly the Hop field on the west side of the kiln. As family retired, the kiln was retired in 1953 and the hop fields sold to their current owner. Hops have been farmed continuously since the late 1890's on most of the land though hop fields were much smaller in the early days compared to current acreages.

10/29/2025

Most people today are three to five generations removed from the farm. Their grandparents maybe milked a cow before school — now they just pick up an oat milk latte on the way to work.

And honestly? That’s not their fault.

They didn’t choose to grow up in a world where small farms disappeared, grocery stores took over, and food started showing up pre-cut, pre-washed, and wrapped in plastic. Somewhere between the barn and the shopping cart, the story got lost.

So when people online say things like “farmers pump animals full of hormones” or “that poor calf was taken from its mom,” I get it. If I didn’t live this life every day, I might believe that too. They’re not bad people — they’re just disconnected.

But here’s the deal: it might not be your fault you don’t know, but it is your responsibility to learn if you care about where your food comes from. And that means learning from actual farmers — not someone on social media reposting dramatic videos with depressing music who’s never stepped in a barn, let alone cleaned one.

Ask questions. Be curious. Visit a farm (with the farmers permission...it isn't a free for all petting zoo).

Because I promise, what you’ll find isn’t some giant corporation twirling its mustache — it’s families who care deeply about their animals, their land, and the people they’re feeding.

And to my fellow farmers — we’ve got work to do too.

We can’t just roll our eyes and say, “People are clueless.” They’re not clueless — they’re just removed. So instead of getting defensive, we need to share our story. Explain the “why.” Show the care. Be patient when it’d be easier not to be.

Because if we don’t tell our story, someone else will — and odds are, they’ll get it wrong.

The disconnect is real, but it doesn’t have to stay that way.

It starts with consumers willing to listen and farmers willing to talk — both working toward the same thing: good food, good land, and a little more understanding between the folks who grow it and the folks who eat it.

We hope to do things like this someday. 😊
09/26/2025

We hope to do things like this someday. 😊

A recent documentary on what is happening to the history of Hillsboro, Oregon.
07/03/2025

A recent documentary on what is happening to the history of Hillsboro, Oregon.

In todays video we will be documenting the loss of Hillsboro's farmland due to data centers and other industry as well as learn the history of how it all beg...

Yes, things were much different back then.
07/21/2024

Yes, things were much different back then.

Back then, we made everything.
We made bread from scratch....and biscuits....and cornbread
We made clothes and quilts
Friends for a lifetime
And our own brand of fun

Back then, we fixed things
We fixed screen doors and windows
And darned socks and patched pants
We fixed clotheslines and old cars
And broken hearts

Back then, we treasured things
We treasured time like it was gold
Evenings on the porch
We treasured old family pictures
And canning jars

Back then, we built things
We built houses full of dreams
And barns for our neighbors
We built families and farms
Courage for the ages
And faith like a rock

If only back then would come 'round once again.

~Sherry ♥️

(Image/Pinterest)

4th of July at Ohio Village.
07/12/2024

4th of July at Ohio Village.

My favorite place to be for the 4th of July is Ohio Village at the Ohio History Connection in Columbus, Ohio!This is a compilation of TWO years' worth of foo...

The ALHFAM National conference was at the Howell Living History Farm in June. Here is a video from that time.
07/12/2024

The ALHFAM National conference was at the Howell Living History Farm in June. Here is a video from that time.

Horses and sheep and chickens, oh my! Then annual conference for ALHFAM, The Association for Living History, Farm and Agricultural Museums was hosted by How...

Lauren Muney of ALHFAM spent a month at Colonial Williamsburg doing research on silhouettes and their production in the ...
07/12/2024

Lauren Muney of ALHFAM spent a month at Colonial Williamsburg doing research on silhouettes and their production in the 18th century. She also spent time interpreting silhouettes themselves and demonstrating her skill in cutting them, all of this supported by a joint fellowship sponsored by Colonial Williamsburg and EXARC: The International Society for Experimental Archaeology and Open-Air Museums. Here is an article from her time there.

A silhouette was a popular form of portraiture in late 18th- and early 19th-century America. Generally appearing as a black profile on a light-colored background, a silhouette is stark and simple compared to a painted portrait. For many Americans, silhouettes conjured up the ideals of classical Gree...

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6702 Bell Road
Yakima, WA
98901

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