Caleb Little
Tennessee River Place / Tennessee River Place Farms
Young farmer, livestock caretaker, and daily steward of real responsibility
Caleb represents the side of regenerative farming that can’t be romanticized away: early mornings, late nights, moving animals, setting wire, and accepting that living things depend on you whether the day is convenient or not.
Location
Focus
Role
Operation
Caleb Little is right in the middle of the kind of work regenerative agriculture depends on most: repeated, physical, often unglamorous decisions that shape how animals and land interact.
When Laura asks what surprised him most, Caleb answers with the honesty of someone whose passion collided with reality. The surprise was not whether the work mattered. The surprise was the rhythm of it: waking up early, staying up late, and learning that farm life does not end when the clock says it should. It ends when the work is done.
That answer opens into something deeper. Caleb talks about the chickens that must be let out when the sun comes up and put away at the end of the day. He speaks about beating hearts relying on you. In just a few lines, he gives the episode one of its clearest definitions of stewardship. Farm life is not just labor. It is responsibility to living things that cannot be put off until tomorrow.
Why Caleb Little Matters
Caleb matters as a Farm Hero because he gives regenerative agriculture its work ethic. He reminds viewers that healthier food and healthier land are not built by ideas alone, but by people who accept the daily cost of caring for living systems.
He matters because he makes the responsibility visible. Animals do not wait for convenience. Fields do not maintain themselves. Caleb’s part of the episode shows that stewardship is measured not only by philosophy but also by whether someone keeps showing up when the work is repetitive, frustrating, or inconvenient.
"Those are beating hearts that are relying on you."
Farm Hero chose Caleb because he represents a side of the movement that deserves more attention: the younger farmer learning that purpose often arrives disguised as discipline.
Farm Hero — Tennessee River Place
Episode 7 shifts to Tennessee, where Caleb gives a clear picture of what regenerative farming looks like in daily practice: setting hot wire, moving animals, maintaining grazing plans, and learning that working with livestock means accepting both long hours and real purpose.