Legacy Apprenticeships
Exclusively available to ASLF Alumni, Legacy Apprenticeships tackle projects on farms across the country and around the world.
2025 Apprenticeships
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2 Apprenticeships - Sponsored by Forever Cheese
Project: Two ASLF Alumni supported one of the largest goat dairies in Spain, preserving and advancing one of the oldest goat breeds in the world.
Globally, the dairy industry is experiencing widespread labor shortages. Our sponsor, Forever Cheese, has been working hard to ensure that shepherds and dairy farmers get the respect they deserve to ensure the longevity of the profession. This mission, “Save the Shepherd,” seeks to expose as many young people as possible to this ancient tradition. Lorenzo Abellan – longtime cheesemaker and supporter of local goat farms – is welcoming ASLF Alums to learn at his farm, Kpra SL.
Kpra SL is one of the largest goat dairies in Spain, located on the lovely paraje La Alquibla, in the Murcia region. The farm sits on 20 acres – 10 of farmland and 10 of dry land almond trees. This apprenticeship will include milking, kidding, and care for a herd of 5000 Murciano-Granadina breed goats.
These Apprenticeships were sponsored by Forever Cheese, the premier US importer of exceptional cheeses and specialty foods from Italy, Spain, Portugal, Croatia, and Switzerland.
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1 Apprenticeship - Sponsored by ASLF
Project: An Apprentice supported a small aquaculture farm during kelp harvest, and helped to restore the local ecosystem through carbon sequestration and water quality improvement
The pressure mounts on aquaculturalists during intense seasons like the late spring kelp harvest. Sugar kelp is a fast-growing sea crop that plays a crucial role in carbon sequestration, helping mitigate climate change and cleaning waterways. The young team at Blue Acres needs extra hands to help.
Based in Southern Rhode Island, Blue Acres Aquaculture is a family owned and operated shellfish & seaweed aquaculture company focused on producing the highest quality, sustainably farmed oysters and sugar kelp products. A Legacy Apprentice at Blue Acres aided in their kelp harvest and with all aspects of their operation, including seeding and harvesting oysters.
Learn more.
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1 Apprenticeship - Sponsored by Northeast Dairy Business Innovation Center
Project: A comprehensive masterclass in food retail business management, focusing on supporting and learning during the busy summer season.
While the summer season provides a critical opportunity for small businesses to maximize income, it also presents the challenge of staffing. An extra set of skilled hands supported, as well as grew and learned, through this busy period.
In New York’s Hudson Valley, an Apprentice worked alongside renowned cheesemonger Kate Arding, including significant time at their landmark store and visits to farms such as Sugar House Creamery, a farmstead creamery in the high peaks of the Adirondacks where Brown Swiss cow milk is transformed into cheese. They also worked alongside the great chef Mona Talbott. An Apprentices also explored other dairies, farms, and businesses in the beautiful Hudson Valley region that collaborate with this unique store, and got a glimpse behind the scenes at one of the most beloved food retailers in the US.
This apprenticeship was sponsored by the Northeast Dairy Business Innovation Center, whose goal is to create resiliency and long-term sustainability for Northeast dairy businesses.
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2 Apprenticeships - Sponsored by The Davie Family Foundation
Project: Two Apprentices supported the Youth Entrepreneurial Institute Farm through germination experiments, soil testing, waste management implementation, and field work.
Ghana is facing a rising demand for sustainable food businesses, and sustainable food sources to feed the elderly, special needs, and homeless. They are poised to support their growing population, and need the right talent to revamp their onsite culinary center, increase their ability to train the local community, and ultimately maximize their yield.
The Buyer’s Edge Youth Entrepreneurial Center and is a farming project and entrepreneurial center located in Asebu, Ghana.
This apprenticeship is sponsored by The Davie Family Foundation, who aims to promote the health, wellbeing, and education of youth worldwide, and the Global Opportunity (GO) Fund, a non-profit organization that promotes the empowerment and enrichment of the lives of women and children in Africa via educational, social support and entrepreneurial projects.
Learn more.
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2 Apprenticeships - Sponsored by Northeast Dairy Business Innovation Center
Project: Specialized training program to grow rural workforce and further the legacy of American artisanal cheese.
Even large, well-known operations like Jasper Hill have trouble finding passionate workforce in rural areas. Multiple ASLF Apprentices have transitioned into long-term roles at Jasper Hill and similar farms, easing the staffing shortage and expanding their craft of artisanal cheesemaking.
Great collaborators of Saxelby Cheesemongers, Jasper Hill is one of America’s most celebrated artisanal cheesemakers located in Greensboro, Vermont. Jasper Hill’s connection with Anne Saxelby has deep roots, and this opportunity directly furthers her core mission. In their words, “for us and the many small producers represented in her cheese case, Anne’s mission has been a conduit of salvation for rural communities across the country.” This was a chance to go broad and deep. Apprentices spent the first 2 weeks of the extended apprenticeship rotating stations in livestock management, milking, cheesemaking and affinage. The final 6 weeks were spent specializing in a particular area of the business, deepening one’s understanding of how a specific part of the process contributes to the final product.
This apprenticeship was sponsored by the Northeast Dairy Business Innovation Center, whose goal is to create resiliency and long-term sustainability for Northeast dairy businesses.
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2 Apprenticeships - Sponsored by TD Bank
Project: Defining and clarifying personal sustainable career goals, building community, supporting the local ecosystem through regenerative aquaculture, and helping to end hunger in Maine on a grow-to-donate vegetable production farm.
Maine is experiencing a steady outflow of its younger population, leaving behind rural communities that are struggling. These towns need focused efforts on intentional community building, supported by donations of food to help the hungry and the cultivation of high-value crops, like oysters, which not only help clean waterways but also provide essential income to sustain local farmers.
These unique apprenticeship is located on Maine’s coast, and provides Apprentices with a 7-week long opportunity to find a deeper connection to the work of sustainable agriculture. Apprentices completed the 3-week May Term at Seguinland, defining and designing their “good life”, and then rolled right into a 4-week apprenticeship, at Glidden Point Oyster Farms and Veggies to Table. At Glidden Point, an Apprentice learned the entire oyster production cycle, from seeding to harvesting, and engaged with the team in caring for their renowned oysters. At Veggies to Table, an Apprentice grew top-quality organic produce and flowers to donate to local people experiencing hunger and needing joy, demonstrated sustainable growing methods, and created lasting connections on the farm and beyond.
Learn more at Seguin Land Institute, Glidden Point, Veggies to Table.
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1 Apprenticeship - Sponsored by The Martins Family and Lazy Lady Farm
Project: An Apprentice worked directly with revered cheesemaker Laini Fondiller, continuing the legacy and craft of Lazy Lady Farm.
Laini, of Lazy Lady Farm, is the very definition of DIY. She started her farm at the advent of the American artisanal cheese movement in 1987 and has been making some of the country’s most exquisite and iconic cheeses since, fully off-grid in Vermont! Quoted from Anne Saxelby herself, “Laini Fondiller is a true pioneer in the annals of American artisan cheese…[she] has been making goat cheese in the hinterlands of northern Vermont since WAY before artisan cheese was on anyone’s radar, let alone cool!.”
A Legacy Apprentice participated in a 9-month long masterclass, learning the art and craft of artisanal cheesemaking directly from Laini herself. They cared for a small herd of Alpine goats, and learned to make, wash, and ship these celebrated cheeses.
Two months of this apprenticeship were sponsored by ASLF and the Martins Family, and 7 months were sponsored by Laini Fondiller and Lazy Lady Farm.
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1 Apprenticeship - Sponsored by Northeast Dairy Business Innovation Center
Project: Assisting a small sheep dairy in their transition from state certification to IMS certification.
Due to the steep costs of IMS-mandated equipment, small dairy farms are often trapped in state-level certification, severely limiting their ability to sell to broader markets across state lines. Blackeyed Susan Sheep Dairy was awarded a grant to purchase this equipment, but they need the labor to implement new production systems and grow their business.
Blackeyed Susan Sheep Dairy is New Hampshire’s only Grade A sheep dairy, situated in the hollow beneath the quaint town of Mont Vernon on 100 acres of land – 40 of pasture and 60 of woods, 30 of which are rotationally grazed on by their flock of 160 ewes and lambs.
An Apprentice learned in the creamery, making soft and Alpine-style cheeses, yogurt, and gelato. This includes food production, affinage, packing, processing, and cleaning. They also be worked under the Sheep Husbandry manager, learning how to care for and handle the livestock. This includes milking, milk measurements, and testing. In the pasture, An Apprentice learned basic veterinary activities and herd management, including fence line relocation, moving the pasture areas, and general pasture management.
This apprenticeship was sponsored by the Northeast Dairy Business Innovation Center, whose goal is to create resiliency and long-term sustainability for Northeast dairy businesses.

