Contact Info
Green Mountain Blue Cheese
Dawn Morin-Boucher and Daniel Boucher
2183 Gore Road, Highgate Center, VT 05459
Phone: 800-447-1205 or 802-868-4193
email: bchrfarm@together.net
Take a virtual tour of Green Mountain Blue Cheese on the Vermont Cheese Trail
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Boucher Family Farm
The history of the Lake Champlain and St. Lawrence River Valleys is the history of the French farmers who settled the region. Tradesmen, trappers, and soldiers required a secure local foodsource that would allow them to pursue their interests, instead of spending all their time preparing, gathering, and hunting for food. Nearly 400 years ago, the Bouchers received several allotments (seigniories) in New France, which eventually became Quebec, Canada. They raised meat and work animals, grew crops, and made soap, butter, and flour - both for themselves and for sale. Wealth, respect, and additional land were the rewards for supporting the local community, but the risk was very high. Many had to flee into the woods with their livestock during conflicts.
During the French and Indian Wars one ancestor, Pierre Boucher, took control of Fort Trois Rivieres after it was depleted of able-bodied men and made peace with the Iroquois, a pivotal event in the history of the province. Boucherville was named in his honor and his statue stands on the grounds of the National Assembly Building in Quebec City. The French legacy remains in the religion, language, culture, and cuisine of the province.
Over the centuries many abandoned farming, but a line of Bouchers remained in active agriculture. Rene Boucher moved his family to Vermont to farm in the 1940's. His son Gilbert, the youngest of eleven brothers and sisters, took over all responsibilities at age 14; he increased the milk herd from 16 to 180 cows and the land base from 45 to 1,000 acres. Today, two of Gilbert's four sons, Daniel and Denis, perform the daily operations, raise the calves, and grow the crops - and they now milk only 110 animals.
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