producers selected to join the Rural Business Innovation Lab

Embark co-founders Eric Wenninger and Bree Breckel pause in their maple woods overlooking Timber Coulee. The pair is joining a collective of upper-midwest businesses as a member of the 2024 Rural Business Innovation Lab cohort.

Coon Creek Watershed producers selected to join the Rural Business Innovation Lab

COON VALLEY, Wis.– Coon Creek Watershed-based Embark Maple is looking forward to trading ideas and growing alongside other rural businesses as a newly accepted member of the 2024 Rural Business Innovation Lab cohort. 

The program aims to support rural businesses in accessing the expertise and resources they need to start and scale their work. Its 2024 cohort kicks off this month, but for Embark Maple, a family farm that aims to share the joy and energy of their woods through their maple syrup, operating their business sustainably and resiliently amid uncertain economic and environmental conditions has long been a priority.

“On the farm side, resilience is very physical,” said Embark Maple co-owner and founder Eric Wenninger. “It’s how we’re working with the land and slowing the flow of water to reduce flood impacts downstream.”  

On the business side, Wenninger explained resilience has to do with reducing their contributions to climate change, while also adjusting their practices in response to increasingly severe weather and increasingly variable harvests. 

For Wenninger, the opportunity to connect with other rural businesses adapting to similar challenges is especially important. As part of the Rural Business Innovation Lab, he’ll have a chance to collaborate with the ten additional Upper Midwest producers the program recognized this year, including the newly formed Driftless Seed Supply, based in the Rush Creek Watershed. 

“I always look forward to the relationships with other-–especially rural—small businesses and entrepreneurs. Even when you have differing products, it’s amazing what you can learn from the challenges that other people have worked through,” Wenninger said. “It’s the connections and it’s the relationships.” 

Relationships and community matter a lot to Wenninger, who also serves on the board of the Coon Creek Community Watershed Council, a local conservation non-profit. As the Coon Creek Watershed faces unprecedented environmental challenges, like increasingly severe floods and droughts, Wenninger knows that collaborating and sharing ideas with and in community is critical to weathering the physical and economic uncertainties of the changing climate. 

“The roots of our business is the forest and our farm,” Wenninger said. “We’re acting very locally, and doing what we can globally, to be a part of our watershed and be a part of our community.”

The mission of the Coon Creek Community Watershed Council is to continue the historic legacy of conservation leadership through improving and restoring our soil, water, and air as stewards of the Creek Watershed. We focus on strategies and practices that individuals can implement. Together, we are learning to make running water walk.

 

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