From 80 acres of homestead ground in 1949 to today’s thriving lemon and Minneola tangelo orchards, the Woodman’s have built a legacy rooted in grit, tradition, and love for the land.
If you ask Bob Woodman how his family ended up farming citrus in Yuma, Arizona, he’ll tell you the story begins long before he ever picked up a pair of pruning shears. It starts in 1949, when his father became one of the original Yuma homesteaders — carving out a life on 80 acres of raw desert ground and slowly transforming it into a working farm.
Bob grew up in that life. He watched his father build something out of stubborn soil and relentless heat, and while his two brothers chose different paths, Bob felt pulled toward the land. Farming wasn’t something he was pushed into — it simply fit.
“In the late ’70s, after college, I came back home,” Bob says. “Every year after that, I took on a little more of the farm. Dad stayed involved right up until the day he died.”