Popular Iowa City business is planting roots in Cumming's agrihood with orchard, restaurant, cider pub

Paul Rasch pulls a couple of Red Free apples from the trees at Wilson's Orchard & Farm, about 5 miles northeast of Iowa City's downtown.

The warm, sweet apples are among roughly 100 varieties that are the heart of Rasch's growing family business. Moving beyond a traditional "you-pick" apple orchard and pumpkin patch, the family's added strawberries, raspberries and blueberries; zinnias, dahlias and other flowers; weddings, music and other special events; a cider business; livestock operation; and farm-to-table restaurant and barbecue smokehouse.

Now, the nearly four-decades-old Iowa City mainstay is taking root in Cumming, a town of about 500 people just southwest of Des Moines, planting a second orchard and building a restaurant and event center in the state's first agrihood, a 900-acre development called Middlebrook. The $800 million mixed residential, retail and commercial project is centered on farming, with the orchard joining a giant community garden.

Wilson's Des Moines metro orchard will sit on 115 acres, with about 30 of them devoted to pasture for livestock. "The rest will be in fruit trees, berries, pumpkins, flowers, vegetables, but also in prairies and places that are left to express themselves naturally," Rasch said in a video Thursday announcing the project.

The goal is to connect people with food and "the land it came from," he said.

Wilson's Orchard owner Paul Rasch works on a new Des Moines metro location in Cumming's Middlebrook agrihood.

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"We've dreamed about expanding to Des Moines for a long time," Rasch told the Des Moines Register, adding that he searched for a year without success for a location close to the capital that had scenic rolling hills, ponds and woods. He mostly found flat cornfields.

"It looked like it wasn't going to happen," he said, until Middlebrook's developer added 160 acres to the project. "And everything fell into place."

Flowers grow in a valley near the creek, Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2022, at Wilson's Orchard & Farm in Iowa City, Iowa.

The plan for the new orchard grew organically as Katie and Jacob Goering, the children of Rasch and his wife, Sara Goering, joined the business, bringing their own skills and ideas. The family wanted to make the operation more sustainable, both environmentally and financially, said Rasch, who bought the orchard with his wife in 2009.

"We wanted to be more diverse. We wanted to expand how long we were open," said Rasch, who spent the summer planting apple trees, strawberries and raspberries at the orchard site on the west side of Middlebrook. "We used to be open three months of the year. Then it crept out to six months and now it's year-round. And what we do in that year has expanded."