Deacon Farmer Serves Up Pumpkins, Pies and Prayer

Deacon Farmer Serves Up Pumpkins, Pies and Prayer October 26, 2012

“I carve prayers in the pumpkins when they’re small,” says Sharon Trabbic, “and as they grow, the prayers grow as well.”

Deacon Ken Trabbic and his wife Sharon are the owners/operators of the Trabbic Family Farm, where they produce over 20 acres of pumpkins as well as wheat, field corn, sweet corn, soybeans and hay.  The farm has been in the Trabbic family for over 100 years; and the Trabbics write on their website about how they decided to establish the pumpkin patch:

“After praying and asking God what we should do on the farm as we raise our children, the thought of pumpkins came to rest on our hearts.  This year will be our 21st year with the pumpkin patch.  It has been an enjoyable experience of sharing in the lives of all those who visit the farm.”

Ken and Sharon spoke to our diaconate formation group about their unique ministry when my husband was preparing for ordination, a number of years ago.  I remember a particularly poignant story which Sharon told, about a woman who found a pumpkin out in the field carved with the message “Pray to End Abortion.”  The woman approached Sharon angrily and said, “My daughter is pregnant, and I certainly don’t want her life to be ruined by a baby!”  Sharon stopped her work and talked with the woman:  praying with her, offering alternatives to abortion, explaining the Church’s loving message about the sacredness of life.  Sharon had no idea of the outcome; but the following year, the woman again visited the pumpkin patch—this time bringing her daughter and her new grandchild—and personally thanked Sharon for her kindness and for helping her to decide in favor of Life.

Besides impromptu abortion counseling, Trabbic Farm offers all the standard kid-friendly activities you’d expect to find on an autumn excursion:  hayrides, pony rides, a straw bale maze and a corn maze, and a three-car pumpkin train with rotating pumpkin-shaped cars.  There’s also a petting zoo with squealing pigs, bunnies with wiggly noses, and plenty of farm animals to delight the city kids.  And of course, fields of ripe pumpkins.

There’s a store where visitors can purchase pumpkin pies and apple butter, popcorn and specialty jams.  Sometimes there’s live entertainment from a local bluegrass group.

But what sets Trabbic Farm apart from other Halloween destinations is the chapel, with its religious imagery and its rustic hay bale seating.  That, and a Rosary Tree from which visitors may pick a dangling rosary to take home.

There’s still time this weekend for an excursion to Trabbic Farm.  The farm is located at 1560 Sterns Road in Erie, Michigan, just north of the Michigan-Ohio border.  Hours are 10:00 a.m. through 7:00 p.m. daily through October 31.  For more information, visit the website or call 734.848.4049.

 


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