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Eric Whitney stands at the truck bed full of corn between the market and the greenhouse at Whitney's Farm Market. The former dairy farm has grown into a nursery, farmer's market and landscaping operation since he took over the business 30 years ago.
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The market sells annuals, perennials and its popular hanging baskets.
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Whitney's Garden Center Has Grown Over Three Decades

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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The farm market offers fresh produce along with bakery, deli and packaged foods. It also accepts SNAP.
CHESHIRE, Mass. — Whitney's Farm Market and Garden Center is still blooming as the summer season wanes and as the harvest of fresh produce, like corn for cookouts, fills the baskets along the market's porch.
 
The garden center's vegetable starts are sold off, but it is filled with landscaping plants and flowers in a multitude of colors, and plenty of gardening tools and supplies, and garden decor. The farm offers design and landscaping services for lawns, gardens, ponds and water features (including koi and pond goldfish), and stone driveways. It also sells mulches, sod, firewood and stove pellets. 
 
When you walk inside the market, you notice a wide range of goods to choose from like the fresh-baked pies and breads, cold cuts and sandwiches, packaged and prepared foods, and fresh ingredients. The farm takes online orders as well.
 
Charles Whitney established the dairy farm on Ingalls Road in 1940; the operation was maintained by his son and daughter-in-law, Peter and Eileen Whitney, until it pivoted to a market and garden center in the 1990s by their son Eric and his wife, Michelle. Eric said he wasn't too fond of working a dairy, and the farm came to reflect that.
 
"Somewhere around 1992 we kind of took over. We were a dairy farm. Originally, my wife and I got out of Stockbridge School of Agriculture, we started to transform it into a market and garden center, and kind of grew little by little from there," Eric Whitney said.
 
"In my later years in high school, I started kind of expanding our small roadside corn stand ... And I guess basically I just enjoyed creating displays and marketing. And then after getting out of Stockbridge, I visited other other farm markets and garden centers across the state, and saw the possibilities and it just kind of grew from there. 
 
"Yes, there was no in the beginning, no real plan that this is what it's going to be, this is what we're going to do. It just kind of grew it little by little."
 
The farm grows most of its plants and Whitney said some of their most popular items are the large hanging baskets overflowing with blooms.
 
"We grow most of our annual plants and hanging baskets for Mother's Day. I guess all of those products that we grow, hanging baskets for Mother's Day especially, are very popular," he said. "We do grow about an acre of greenhouses, so we have a pretty large selection of annuals that we grow, and we also grow perennials outdoors."
 
The market also has a wide range of fresh produce grown on the farm and the deli offers salads, soups and sandwiches to-go along with single slices of pies and desserts. Whitney said they bake their own bread and smoke their meats as well.
 
One popular sandwich is the "Pickler," which uses a large pickle as the bun. Whitney said the "Fiery Farmer" (blackened turkey and chipotle sauce)  and "Route 8 Roadkill" (turkey, roast beef and ham with cheese) are two other favorites people enjoy.
 
The transformation hasn't been without its challenges; Whitney noted the difficulties surviving the economic collapse of 2008 and the more recent pandemic. Like many businesses in the area, he's also struggled to find and retain employees.  
 
Through it all, Whitney's has been famed as one of the largest retail farm and garden centers in the county and a seasonal destination spot. In the fall, it's packed with families picking out pumpkins and sipping cider; in the spring, garden enthusiasts are piling flowers and vegetable plants onto carts. The market's merchandise shifts with the seasons and it closes for a few months in the winter.
 
Whitney said he wants to the farm to be a place where people can have fun.  
 
"Just to be a place where people enjoy to visit," he said. 
 
Whitney's Farm and Market is located at 1775 State Road (Route 8). It is open seven days a week from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.


Tags: farmers market,   home & garden,   

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Adams Man Gets 20 Years for Child Sex Assault

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — An Adams man has been sentenced to 15 to 20 years in state prison for sexually assaulting a child. 
 
Michael Hiser, 39, was found guilty by a Superior Court jury on June 11 of single counts of aggravated indecent assault and battery on a child under 14, indecent assault and battery on a child under 14 and indecent exposure; two counts of posing or exhibiting a child in the nude, and three counts of photographing an unsuspecting nude child.
 
He was sentenced on Tuesday to prison for the aggravated indecent assault, with further sentencing of eight to 10 years for the indecent assault, four to five for the photographing and 2 1/2 for indecent exposure, all to be served concurrently. Hiser was also sentenced to five years probation on the posing or exhibiting charge, with conditions not to contact or go near the victim and no unsupervised contact with minors. He will have to register with the Sex Offender Registry Board and take sex offender treatment. 
 
Investigators found that from approximately 2020 to 2022, Hiser would sneak into the victim's room at night to inappropriately photogram and touch them inappropriately. Additionally, he would follow the victim around the house and photograph them with inappropriate intent. An additional incident involved the defendant acting in a sexual manner in the presence of the minor and the investigators found multiple explicit images of the victim on Hiser's phone.
 
"Cases of child abuse and child sexual abuse shake the foundation of our community," said Berkshire District Attorney Timothy Shugrue. "Today justice has been served on behalf of a child who survived unimaginable abuse. While the guilty verdict and lengthy sentence do not take away any of the horrific crimes the defendant committed, I hope today provides an opportunity for both the child and their family to move forward."
 
Chief of the Child Abuse Unit Andrew Giarolo represented the commonwealth and Associate Director of Victim Witness Advocates Kristen Rapkowicz served as the victim witness advocate on behalf of the DA's Office. The Adams Police Department with assistance from a Williamstown Police Department's Berkshire Law Enforcement Task Force digital evidence unit officer led the investigation.
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