Guided by Values. Rooted in Faith.

A family of six posing against a brick wall, including a man, a woman, and four children, all smiling at the camera.

Our story

Nubby Farms was founded in early 2021 by Jamie and Ana Nabakowski, a husband-and-wife team answering a calling to share the good food they’d been growing for their own family for nearly a decade. With a deep-rooted belief in responsible stewardship, guided by Genesis 1:28, they turned their passion into a purpose: providing wholesome, pasture-raised food for others.

Jamie and Ana, along with their four children (ages 5 to 13), run the farm as a family. What began as a few garden beds and backyard chickens has grown year by year into a thriving small farm rooted in regenerative practices, animal welfare, and top-quality products.

After careful thought, prayer, and planning, they determined that pastured poultry was the best fit for their land, values, and budget, aligning perfectly with their commitment to regenerative agriculture and good stewardship.

The name “Nubby” comes from a family nickname dating back to the early 1900s, when the first Nabakowski’s immigrated from Germany. Neighbors in their new community struggled with the pronunciation and affectionately shortened it to “Nubby”—a name that stuck through the generations and is still used today by friends and family alike.

At Nubby Farms, everything is raised with care, integrity, and a whole lot of heart. From pastured chicken and fresh eggs to homemade sourdough, local honey, and elderberry syrup, it's more than a farm, it's a way of life.

A black and white illustration of a lavender plant with multiple flowering stems.

Genesis 1:28

God blessed them; and God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth, and subdue it; and rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky and over every living thing that moves on the earth.

A farm scene with a man and a woman tending to chickens and ducks, a rooster on a shed roof, a tractor in the background, and lush green trees and plants.

What Folks Are Sayin’