Community News
Lisa Ransom, vicar at The Church of Our Savior at Mission Farm since 2020, says the original mission for Mission Farm includes providing beneficial service to the community that is now Killington.
Small amphitheater in Killington is part of a master plan to better connect, engage with community and nature
At a simple service on Easter Sunday, a rainbow of color was unveiled in a dossal behind the altar at Church of Our Saviour at Mission Farm in Killington.
The landscape at Mission Farm is being reimagined and reshaped with a focus on conservation and sustainability by a team of professionals and volunteers.
This year Mission Farm is asking the greater Killington community to support our local veterans and BROC Community Action (BROC).
“The folks from Mission Farm came to the recycling center hoping to find a used refrigerator for their food shelf,” Haff said. Their main goal is to facilitate communal meals for food shelf clients once the Covid threat is under control, he said.
After a 40-year hiatus from farming, Mission Farm in Killington is working the land once again. Their goal: address the community’s needs through food and faith.
Vicar Lisa Ransom and Farmer Priest Rachel Field welcomed two colonies of honey bees to Mission Farm in Killington, Sunday, May 2