Sebastien Lajeunesse has found comfort and purpose at a hops and strawberry farm in north Lake County.

And the Mount Dora man is on a mission to help other veterans as well.

He calls this former citrus grove in Umatilla his “veterans healing farm.”

“So what I do,” he said, “is I hire other combat veterans like myself who suffer from PTSD for them to come work at the farm in a therapeutic environment to help cope with their trauma.”

Lajeunesse served seven years in the U.S. Marine Corps infantry, including two combat tours in Afghanistan.

He left military service five years ago and worked for a time as a salesman for a food company. That wasn’t for him.

“I was struggling adapting with the civilian world and also coping with everything I saw and went through while in Afghanistan,” he said.

And he wanted to go to school.

So his father, who runs Agro Research International, hired him part-time to help test his organic products. That’s where Lajeunesse discovered a love for what he calls “horticulture therapy.”

“I realized that all my stress and … and all the demons from Afghanistan just sort of went away and I felt calm and at peace,” he said. “And so that’s when my dream and the idea of a veterans healing farm started to grow.”

He experimented with hops plants, thinking of northern markets, but the vines grew well, and St. Johns Hops was born.

Lajeunesse finds satisfaction in growing things.

“Our hands were once trained and meant to destroy and kill,” he said. “And now instead they are being used to create life and beauty in the world. And it’s just such a peaceful, beautiful feeling.”

The farm employs two other men, a Vietnam-era vet and Keith Brown, who fought for the U.S. Army in Iraq. The focus on veterans is key for him.

“That’s the main reason I’m here. He’s an infantry man. I’m an infantry man. We connect,” Brown said. “The first day we connected and there’s never been an issue. Always, always good.”

There’s a small pen for chickens, a stand of sunflowers, a friendly black German shepherd roaming about and 23 rows built for hops.

They have telephone poles either end with lines between them and rope after rope hanging 20 feet to the ground. The vines grow up the ropes, and the hops cones hang among the leaves.

Fluttering at the top of the poles are Old Glory, a POW flag and the Marine Corps and other service banners.

Read the whole article at Central Florida News
Source: Joe Byrnes/Central Florida News