Miniature Highland cows
Our shaggy signature. Smaller than standard Highlands but every bit as hardy, they're perfect for a small farm like ours and a joy to share with visitors.
We didn't set out to run a farm. We set out to answer a calling — and somehow that calling came with cows.
Jeremy and Amanda packed up and headed to Northwest Arkansas, following a calling that had been building for years.
20 acres in Lowell, AR — enough pasture for livestock, a garden, and room to grow into a vision bigger than a spreadsheet.
Nigerian dwarf goats arrived first, then miniature Highland cows. The chickens, turkeys, and pigs followed.
Soap kitchen running, shop open, and plans underway for a farm store, petting zoo, and community outreach.
We specialize in heritage and pasture-raised animals — breeds that thrive on good grass, space to roam, and patient care.
Our shaggy signature. Smaller than standard Highlands but every bit as hardy, they're perfect for a small farm like ours and a joy to share with visitors.
Small in size, big in personality — and the source of the rich, creamy milk behind our raw milk and soaps.
We keep a mixed flock for both eggs and meat. Pastured, rotated, and treated like the garden helpers they are.
Raised slow, the way turkeys used to be. A limited flock each season.
Happy pigs, raised on pasture with plenty of room to do what pigs do best.
We have to give props to our amazing lifestock Guardian Dogs that protect day & night!
Link Farm is more than a small business. It's a calling — and we believe that calling comes from a God who invites each of us into something bigger than ourselves.
"Jesus answered, 'I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.'"
— John 14:6
Our vision for this land has always been threefold: raise good food, steward the land well, and grow into a Christian ministry that serves our community and beyond.
What does that look like? It looks like eggs in a neighbor's fridge. It looks like a bar of soap gifted for a birthday. It looks like a kid meeting a Highland cow for the first time. And, increasingly, it's going to look like donations to the food pantry, community gatherings, a working farm store, and a petting zoo where families are welcome to come rest and be blessed for a while.
We'd love for you to be part of it.
Northwest Arkansas