Owner Daniel Neeleman said it will have a creamery component, where you can buy the farm’s butter and ice cream, as well as meats and other local goods.
“In the summer, when the weather’s nice, people will just come out and sit on the picnic table and have an ice cream cone,” he told KPCW.
They would also like a garden, orchard, livestock facilities and event center.
And there’s good reason to think agricultural tourism could work for Ballerina: the Neeleman family has garnered millions of followers interested in their pastoral lifestyle.
The farm on North Democrat Alley gets its name from Hannah Neeleman’s career as a dancer. She also competes in pageants, has eight kids with Daniel and was recently profiled in The New York Times.
This article is published through the Utah News Collaborative, a partnership of news organizations in Utah that aim to inform readers across the state.