Northland College

Northland College
  • Academics
  • Campus Life
  • Admissions
  • Athletics
  • Centers
  • Sustainability
Search
  • Directory
  • Campus Map
  • Calendar
  • Alumni
  • Giving
  • News
More...
  • Academics
    • Undergraduate
    • Faculty
    • Resources
    • Opportunities
      • Internships
      • Undergraduate Research
      • Study Abroad
      • Off-campus Learning
      • Student Jobs
    • Graduate Success
    • Course Catalog
    • Transcript Request
    • Commencement
  • Campus Life
    • Dining
    • Housing
    • Outdoor Orientation
    • Diversity & Inclusion
      • Indigenous Cultures Center
        • Native Student Offerings
        • Powwow & Awareness
        • Community Outreach
        • Native American Museum
    • Get Involved
    • Bicycles & Gear Rental
    • Fitness Center
    • Services
      • Counseling Services
      • Accommodations
      • Health Services
      • Safety & Security
  • Admissions
    • Visit Campus
    • Tuition
    • Financial Aid
      • Scholarships
      • Grants
      • Loans
      • FAFSA
      • Veterans
    • Enroll
    • Meet Your Admissions Counselor
    • College Fairs
  • Athletics
    • Athletic Website
    • Athletic Facilities
    • Varsity Club Membership
    • Buy Team Gear
    • Hall of Fame
    • Annual Golf Classic
    • Camps, Leagues, and Tournaments
    • Give to Athletics
  • Centers
    • Mary Griggs Burke Center for Freshwater Innovation
      • Our Work
      • Student Research Opportunities
      • Lab Services
      • Burke Center in the News
      • Water Summit
    • Center for Rural Communities
      • Rural Livelihood Initiatives
        • Quality of Life Database
        • Northwoods Community Survey
        • Opinion Polls
        • Local Food Systems
      • Human-Environment Connection
      • Publications
      • Data Visualizations
      • Student Opportunities
    • Sigurd Olson Environmental Institute
      • LoonWatch
        • About Loons
        • Protect Loons
        • Get Involved
        • Loon Appreciation Week and Poster
      • Timber Wolf Alliance
        • Wolf Awareness Week and Poster
        • Learn About Wolves
        • TWA Speakers Bureau
        • Wolf Status Reports
        • Vision for Wolves
        • Great Lakes Wolf Symposium
      • Youth Outreach Programs
      • SONWA Book Awards
        • SONWA Seals
      • Sigurd Olson Legacy
      • Apostle Islands Stewardship Symposium
      • Intangible Magazine
      • Forest Lodge Educational Campus
        • Rental Information
    • Hulings Rice Food Center
      • Compost Center
      • Larson Food Lab
      • Campus Gardens
      • Student Opportunities
  • Sustainability
  • Alumni
    • Alumni Board
      • Alumni Awards
    • Get Involved
      • Ask Our Alumni Panels
    • Fall Festival
      • Camp Brother Bear
    • Pride Pack, Apparel, and Merchandise
    • Class Notes
    • Transcript Request
    • Update Your Information
    • Events
    • Give
    • Oral History Project
  • Giving
    • Christopher T. Morgan Scholarship
    • Meet Our Team
  • About Northland
    • President Chadwick L. Dayton
    • Northland College Magazine
    • Campus Sculpture Tour
    • Advocacy & Public Discourse
    • Consumer Information

Rebuilding the Health of Our Planet

Todd Rothe ’10 and Jamie Tucker ’16 launch a Big Lake Organics.

October 18, 2021

Share

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • email

On September 1, 2021, Todd Rothe ’10 and Jamie Tucker ’16 pulled on leather gloves, hooked up a trailer to a truck, and began collecting garbage bins of food scraps, coffee grounds, and paper products to haul to a farm field to begin the composting process.

“We’re turning organic waste into soil, and we can use that finished compost to regenerate the land, keep our water clean, and grow better food,” Todd said. “Maybe we could keep all the organic waste of Chequamegon Bay out of the landfill—wouldn’t that be beautiful?”

Big Lake Organics owners Jamie Tucker and Todd Rothe stand near compost pile.Todd and Jamie have been friends for all their adult lives. They discovered one another initially through their love of timber frame construction and Todd’s first business, Chisel Craft. Todd studied business at Northland; Jamie studied geology and water science. They both are serial entrepreneurs with a deep appreciation for land and community.

Twenty years of deer camp and potlucks later, they launched Big Lake Organics, a start-up business to collect organic waste, turn it into compost, and sell the final product to consumers. Big Lake Organics is their local solution to addressing the climate crisis while providing a model for rural development that could be replicated across the country.

“The composting process is one of the most magical and enriching acts humans have to offer the world—it goes beyond keeping food waste out of the landfill,” Todd said. “Compost is this living substance that feeds soil microorganisms, ramps up photosynthesis in plants, protects against erosion, and aids in sequestering carbon. It gives us the ability to take waste and use it to literally rebuild the health of our planet.”

Todd and Kelsey Myrvold-Rothe ’05 own and operate River Road Farm, a diversified organic farm south of campus in the Marengo River valley. He teaches sustainable agriculture courses at the College and has managed the Hulings Rice Food Center, including a composting center, for the last three years. Yes, he is busy.

Truckload of food waste being dumped into composting faciityIn his time running the campus composting center, Todd had seen an increased demand for organic waste collection and for finished soil. Food waste is a serious environmental issue. An estimated one-third of food grown in the United States ends up in a landfill—and there it generates methane, a super-charged greenhouse gas more potent than carbon dioxide.

In the last year at Northland, Todd had to start a waiting list for household food waste and limit the amount the College accepted from businesses to keep up with campus’ demands. During the pandemic, compostable to-go containers from campus maxed out the system. “We want to keep capturing as much food waste as possible, and the only way to do that is to grow beyond the small system that is at Northland College and spin-off with a company that can handle more waste,” Todd said.

When Todd first talked to Jamie, who is a fourth-generation shareholder of IDEAL Industries, Inc., a 105-year-old family-owned business, about the idea of a compost business, Jamie was interested for three reasons—it benefits the community and the environment, it’s an example of rural business development, and it builds on a program started by Northland students twenty-eight years ago.

Big Lake Organics is now the first Hulings Rice Food Center incubator business to fly the coop—and Northland signed on as their first client. The campus compost program will continue as it has for the last twenty-eight years, but with Big Lake Organics hauling it away for processing. “This is an opportunity to take the values that Northland has given us and make something of it, make a business out of it, to help our community,” Jamie said.

To find out more visit https://biglakeorganics.com/

  • Dill plant.

    Dan’s Dill

    Dill grows like a weed in the garden hidden on the outskirts of Northland College’s campus. It grows like a weed because I put it…

    Dan’s Dill
  • Danny Simpson walks with Governor Tony Evers

    Governor Evers Visits Northland For Sustainable Food Program

    Hulings Rice Food Center Assistant Manager Danny Simpson led Governor Tony Evers on a tour of the processing center, compost, and high tunnel garden this…

    Governor Evers Visits Northland For Sustainable Food Program
  • Northland College Hulings Rice Food Systems Center

    Hulings Rice Food Center Receives Funding for Hazelnut Development

    The Northland College Hulings Rice Food Center has been awarded $49,300 from the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection to work on product…

    Hulings Rice Food Center Receives Funding for Hazelnut Development
  • The Impossible Burger Won’t Save Us

    The Impossible Burger, a non-animal burger gaining popularity, is being marketed as the solution to saving the planet. How? Persuade people to stop eating beef…

    The Impossible Burger Won’t Save Us
  • Visit
  • Info
  • Apply

News

  • Scholarship Power

    Xcel Energy has a history of supporting environmental initiatives at Northland College…

  • Wrestling to Join Northland College’s Sports Lineup

    Northland College Athletics is thrilled to announce the launch of men’s and…

  • Burke Center Launches Buoys in Lake Namekagon to Fill Knowledge Gap

    The Lake Namekagon system in northwestern Wisconsin is set to receive long-term…

  • A RARE Opportunity

    I’ve lived my whole life in Wisconsin. It’s a great place to…

  • Sparks Fly

    Lynn Rued’s Northland story starts at a classic north woods fall pot-luck—the…

  • Outdoor Education Graduates Win Gold

    Just a few weeks after Commencement, Cameron Jaeger and Liam Jansen are…

  • The Philosophy of Video Games

    My first semester teaching at Northland was not quite what I expected…

  • Northland College Athletics to Offer Youth Sports Camps

    Northland College’s Athletics Department will host several upcoming sport camps for youth…

  • Financial Aid Makes College Possible for Aspiring Third Grade Teacher

    Alyssa Hoffman is a first-generation college student from Park Falls, Wisconsin, who…

  • Northland College Announces Daniel Schumacher as Executive Director of Intercollegiate Athletics

    Northland College is pleased to announce the appointment of Daniel Schumacher as…

News Archive »

1411 Ellis Avenue
Ashland, WI 54806
(715) 682-1699 | Map
  • About Northland
  • Constitution Day at Northland
  • Consumer Information
  • Privacy Policy
  • Take a Class
  • Employment
  • Campus Store

my.northland.edu

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2023 Northland College. All rights reserved.

https://www.northland.edu/news/compost

Our website uses cookies for necessary functions and to enhance your browsing experience. Learn more in our Privacy Policy.

Accept & Continue