Since the spring of 2012, Toni Ortega and Lyndsey Langsdale have owned and operated Lost City Farm, an urban farm in Reno’s midtown. The farmers recently announced that they will be temporarily closing the farm while they move from their current location on the corner of Center and Moran streets.
Whatโs going on? I saw a Reno Gazette-Journal story with your photo that said โfarm closing.โ
Yeah. At first it was a little dramatic. The biggest thing is that weโve been aware for three years that we might have to shut down, because the landowner and us agreed about four years ago that we were only going to sign a three-year lease. Thatโs what he felt comfortable with. Honestly, thatโs what we felt comfortable with. We had never done something like this. It had never been done in Reno. When we signed the three-year lease, we didnโt know how we were going to be received by the community. We didnโt know if that ground would produce anything, if that soil was actually viable. We had an inkling and that was all. Three years, at the time, was plentyโplus, weโll take what we can get. And we had a really solid agreement. $1 a month was our rent. So the third year happened really quicklyโquicker than we thought it would come. And we wanted to renew. We were like, yeah, this awesome. The community is supporting it. The soil is awesome. Weโve been adding to it. And we went up to the landowner and he said, โno dice.โ
Whatโs his name?
I donโt want to tell you. We keep him separate from all media because the biggest thing for us and him is that his familyโbecause itโs not just one manโthey canโt be the bad guys in this. And thatโs the agreement we made four years ago when we met him. We realized our lease might possibly not be renewed. He said, โI donโt want to come out like Iโm the one who destroyed you all.โ And I said, โYeah, youโre not. Youโre the only person whoโs actually given us land.โ He built the fence. He gave us a huge donation for seeds. He was really in love with the project. โฆ And his family owns properties. Theyโre businesspeople. Itโs totally their right to sell. If I had that parcel and the property values skyrocketedโitโs worth, I think, at least a millionโIโd probably sell it and go buy five acres with a barn and water rights. So weโve been keeping him private. โฆ Weโre making this public statement so that we can find a new home. Weโve decided that weโd still like to farm, and weโd still like to farm urban. It doesnโt mean weโre going to be shutting our doors. It just means weโre relocating.
Well, your farm doesnโt really have doors.
[Laughs] Rightโthe gate. Weโre not locking the gate permanently.
You hope to be back by spring?
Our hope is to be back by spring, but we feel like realistically if we can find a parcel and set up a long-term lease, this next spring will just be about infrastructure, rebuilding soil, we have to put a fence up, new irrigationโbasically starting from scratch, depending on what parcel is offered to us and what we can work with. โฆ We have like 25 parcels offered to us right now. When we put out our first public statement, there was this crazy outpouring, โOh my gosh! Lost City Farm! No!โ And people left and right are offering different size parcels, some very urban, some not so urban, some probably not really viable at the end of the day. โฆ Weโve been narrowing it down, and our list right now is about six real possible, viable parcels. But we have a very big niche, and itโs to stay urban.
You want to stay in the coreโmidtown, downtown?
That would be ideal. Itโs getting more difficult to do that. Thereโs so much more development now. At lease eight of the parcels that we looked at three years ago now have homes on them. So itโs getting harder to stay in this neighborhood. โฆ Our next choice would be still urban, still neighborhoody. We donโt want to move out to the โburbs. We donโt want to move to Fallon. Nothing against that. Itโs just that this is what we doโwe urban farm.
