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The land

Wiberg's sits on 88 hectares in Kuusjoki, Southwest Finland. Fields, forest, margins, and farmyard. This is where we farm, and it's this land we steward.

The place that makes it real

Aerial view of Ali-Härri fields and barns in Kuusjoki

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hectares

Fields, forest, margins, and farmyard

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annual precipitation

Average for this region. Maritime-influenced, steady through the year

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growing days

Late April through mid-October

Three zones

Chickens grazing on open field with silage bales at Ali-Härri

Fields

56 hectares of arable land

The fields at Ali-Härri are silty clay, fine-textured and slow to drain. A network of subsurface drainage pipes runs beneath them, carrying water to the ditches. The Kuusjoki River flows through our fields. We observe compaction, waterlogging during wet periods, limited organic matter, and few worms. All fields are now in mixed grass and clover pasture, and we are integrating animals to address these challenges.

Continuous forest cover at Ali-Härri

Forest

24 hectares of productive mixed forest

Spruce, pine, and birch across mineral soils ranging from herb-rich to dry heath. The standing volume is approximately 5,265 cubic metres, growing at 190 cubic metres per year. The forest is managed under a continuous cover forestry plan, prioritising species and age diversity. Selective harvesting keeps the canopy intact, supports natural regeneration, and maintains the forest as habitat, carbon store, and a place to walk.

Aerial view of field margins and buffer zones

Margins

8 hectares serving infrastructure, roads, and edges

The remaining land is access roads, drainage ditches, field margins, and the ground beneath the farmyard and barns. Most farms treat these in-between spaces as waste. We see them differently: buffer zones along waterways, habitat corridors between fields and forest, strips where pollinators and ground-nesting birds find cover. The margins hold the landscape together, and we are eager to find ways to make them more productive.

Features of the landscape

Kuusjoki River flowing along the western boundary of the farm

Kuusjoki River

The river that gives the village its name runs along the northern boundary of the farm. It connects the land to the broader watershed of the Archipelago Sea.

Function: Supports riparian habitat, attracts pollinators and birds along the banks, and gives the farm an enjoyable walking route

Exposed bedrock outcropping with lichens and mosses

Exposed bedrock

Rocky outcroppings emerge across the property where the soil thins to nothing. These areas break up the field and forest pattern as well as create microclimates: warmer in spring, sheltered from wind, and home to lichens and mosses that grow nowhere else on the farm.

Function: Creates sheltered microclimates and provides refuge for diverse species

Farm pond surrounded by vegetation

Pond

An existing pond on the property supports amphibians, dragonflies, and migratory birds that use it as a stopover.

Function: Provides wildlife habitat, retains water, and anchors biodiversity on the farm

Drainage landscape on the farm

Subsurface drainage

Perforated pipes buried roughly one metre deep run beneath the fields, carrying excess water to surface ditches. On silty clay soils, this infrastructure is what makes farming possible. Without it, the fields would waterlog through the wet seasons and compact under their own weight. We are curious to see how our management may change this over time.

Function: Keeps fields accessible and transports excess water away from the field

Farm well

Own well

The farm has its own well, providing water independent of municipal supply. It serves the livestock and irrigation for the future market garden.

Function: Provides water independence from municipal supply and supports daily farm operations

Aerial view of scattered farm field parcels

The patchwork

The farm is not one neat rectangle. The fields are spread across multiple cadastral parcels, separated by forest, ditches, and neighbours. The farthest field is a ten-minute drive from the farm. This scattered layout is typical of Finnish farmland. It adds logistical complexity, but it also creates natural edges and transitions that are fun to play with.

Function: Creates edge habitat, connects landscape patches, and adds microclimate diversity