Lissa Freese remembers the days when seeing a car driving onto Rancho Mission Viejo would have been rare. Today, it's just part of business on the 23,000-acre operation in Orange County, California.
Rancho Mission Viejo is one of the last working ranches and the largest lemon producer in the county. It's also an "agrihood."
The O'Neill/Moiso/Avery family, which has owned and operated the land since the 1880s, has embraced encroaching urbanization by becoming developers themselves in a way that extends their agricultural heritage to the public.
Family and Neighbors
Freese moved to the ranch as a young girl in 1967, when her father, Gilbert Aguirre, was offered a job by the ranch founder's grandson, Richard J. O'Neill, who managed the land with his sister Alice O'Neill (Moiso) Avery and her son Tony Moiso. At his death in 2009, O'Neill passed management on to Moiso.
Aguirre, now 86, is Moiso's longest-tenured employee. He continues to oversee the ranch's agricultural operations - primarily beef cattle, citrus, and avocados. Freese, who returned to the ranch after college, now takes care of day-to-day operations. Her son, Brent Freese, manages the cow-calf operations.
In some ways, things haven't changed. The working pens on the ranch are ones Aguirre built decades ago, and there have always been early mornings and cattle to tend. In other ways, the ranch has seen significant transformation, and not just with the incorporation of artificial insemination and electronic record keeping.
While Freese was growing up, the only people who lived on the ranch were the O'Neill/Moiso/Avery family and the families of their employees. Freese remembers trips to town as a big deal, with neighbors picking up food and supplies for each other.
Esta historia es de la edición December 2023 de Successful Farming.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición December 2023 de Successful Farming.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
KRISTOPHER KLOKKENGA
The Illinois native farmed in Ghana and lived in Denmark before coming home to take over his family's operation.
DON'T LET YOUR GUARD DOWN WHEN USING A SKID STEER
These mini workhorses are fun to operate and make chores go quickly. But injuries can occur if safety isn’t top of mind.
MEET NCBA PRESIDENT MARK EISELE
This Wyoming rancher brings a lifetime of cattle experience.
TOP SHOPS
THREE DIFFERENT APPROACHES TO TURN A SHOP INTO YOUR FARM'S HEADQUARTERS.
GRAZING MANAGEMENT TRANSFORMS GRASSLANDS
Developing the land's natural resources benefits the ranch operator and the wildlife.
KNOW YOUR NOZZLE
Small factors can help optimize herbicide applications.
MOUNTAINS OF MACHINERY
COMMODITY PRICES ARE LOW AND INTEREST RATES ARE HIGH. BUT AN OVERSUPPLY OF USED EQUIPMENT OFFERS OPPORTUNITIES.
DAIRY BARN FLOORING
It starts at the ground level.
SHOP HACKS
Great storage improvisations using PVC pipe.
HOW TO KILL A FARM
Problem: Out-of-state, non-farming heirs want their farming brother to do all the work but share decisions and profit.