Carrying the Dream Forward
Though he didn’t initially intend to follow his father into agriculture, Kevin’s path evolved naturally. As his father’s health declined, the opportunity to take over the ranch emerged. He and his wife, Cindy — a fourth‑generation ag kid herself — purchased the property in the early 2000s and continued the work his father began.
The grove’s original century‑old trees stood until recently, but modern markets require modern orchards. Kevin has spent years redeveloping the ranch, replacing aging trees with Cara Caras, Star Ruby grapefruit, and young, vigorous plantings that meet today’s size and quality demands.
The work isn’t glamorous. Wind machines break at 2 a.m., irrigation lines blow out, and frost nights require vigilance. But he describes it matter‑of‑factly, the way farmers do: you don’t think about it — you just do it.
His memories of farming alongside his father are vivid: long nights checking furrow irrigation, repairing pumps, cutting suckers with a field worker named Cornelio who didn’t speak English but always shared what little he had. Kevin recalls trying a shriveled red pepper Cornelio handed him, only to spend the next hour under a well pipe trying to cool his mouth.
“Those are the things you don’t forget,” he says. “They shape who you become.”