Todd Ulizio is the co-owner of Two Bear Farm, an organic vegetable farm in Whitefish, Montana, that’s quietly become a cornerstone of the Flathead Valley’s local food community. Alongside his wife Rebecca, Todd has spent nearly two decades growing food, building soil, and figuring out how to make a small, values-driven farm work in a world that doesn’t always make it easy.
Todd’s path to farming was anything but direct. He grew up in Connecticut and followed a traditional educational and career path, eventually becoming an accountant at a prestigious Big Six firm. Experiencing success but not fulfillment, he walked away from the business world to study wildlife biology and worked on projects ranging from brown bears in Alaska to wolverines in Montana. Over time, he began to see a common thread: most of the problems facing wildlife are really problems about how humans use land—and food, he realized, is where people interact with land every single day.
In this conversation, Todd and I talk about that winding path—from accounting to wildlife biology to farming—and what it’s taught him about work, burnout, stewardship, and attention. We get into the realities of small-scale farming, the pressures of building a business with your spouse, the health wake-up call that forced him to rethink everything, and the quieter, more grounded philosophy that now shapes his life and work. This is a thoughtful, honest conversation about choosing a meaningful path, learning to let go of what you can’t control, and finding a way to stay rooted in a rapidly changing world.
Photos courtesy of Todd Ulizio and Two Bear Farm
LISTEN & DOWNLOAD:
Apple Podcasts
Spotify
…or wherever you get your podcasts!
A HEARTFELT THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS:




RESOURCES:
Topics Discussed:
- 0:00 – Exciting announcement
- 2:33 – Intro
- 4:14 – Patreon + Sponsors + Old Salt
- 7:24 – Where Todd grew up
- 11:38 – Todd as a kid
- 13:07 – Off to college
- 17:34 – Ditching accounting
- 21:57 – How change felt
- 24:18 – Post University of Montana to Alaska
- 27:49 – Alaska takeaways
- 31:36 – Choosing farming
- 37:05 – What helped Todd make an impact
- 40:08 – A relationship forged in fire
- 43:32 – Doubts in the moment?
- 47:39 – Food system frustrations and burnout
- 52:43 – How to lighten up
- 1:01:07 – Dexter cows
- 1:02:34 – Always going and stillness
- 1:09:02 – The farm
- 1:14:56 – What’s next
- 1:18:06 – Wrapping up
Information Referenced:
- Two Bear Farm
- Student Conservation Association
- A Sand County Almanac, Braiding Sweetgrass and The Serviceberry are all books that led to Todd’s vision for making an impact on the environment.
- Curt Meine, an Aldo Leopold scholar, on M&P
- Ed’s book list
- How Todd learned to lighten up: The Four Agreements, Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior, The Emerald podcast
- Dexter cows
- The Farmers’ Stand
Enjoy this episode? Then you might like these too:
- Kelly Beevers – Connection, Collaboration, Conservation
- Helen Rebanks – “The Farmer’s Wife” – Live at the Old Salt Festival
- Mark Easter – Food, Soil, and Our Planet’s Future
- Kami Bakken – How to Build a Life and Career in the West’s Wide-Open Spaces
- Yvon Chouinard – The Perpetual Pursuit of Simplicity
- Chris Keyes – From Outside to RE:PUBLIC
Visit the podcast page for a full list of episodes where you can filter episodes by topic and guests’ vocations.





