• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Home Garden Joy
  • Home
  • How to Garden
    • Garden Pests
    • Plant Diseases
    • Plant Profiles
    • Raised Bed Gardening
    • Seed Starting
    • Tools & Equipment
  • Vegetables
  • Fruit
  • Herbs
  • About
    • Books & Classes
      • Herbalism Classes
      • Books for Christian Herbalists
      • Privacy Policy

How Seven Oaks Got Its Name

April 8, 2009 by Jeanne

Friends passing the hand-painted sign on our driveway announcing they’ve reached Seven Oaks often ask me, “How did you come up with the name for the farm?” It’s also the name for my writing, editing and marketing consulting business.

It’s a really funny story…How Seven Oaks got its name.

home garden joy

How Seven Oaks Got Its Name

When we were building the house, we’d stop by to check in with the building crew. On many occasions, we noticed seven large birds majestically soaring over the fields and creek. One day, John and I stood with Jonathan, one of the workers, watching the birds. I waxed poetic about them.

“Look at the hawks! Aren’t they beautiful? We’ll call it Seven Hawks Farm.”

“Ah, ma’am?” Jonathan cleared his throat. “Those aren’t hawks. They’re…buzzards.”

“Buzzards?”

“Yes…like…ah…black vultures.”

(For the uninitiated, vultures or buzzards are carrion eaters…and the black buzzards of Virginia are especially hated by farmers. They will take down livestock, especially smaller stock like sheep or goats, or peck the eyes out of newborn calves so they can kill and eat them. They are mean creatures. Useful in nature, but mean).

Since Seven Vultures Farm sounded awful, we searched for another term. We liked “Seven” for some unknown reason. It’s lucky, but neither John nor I are superstitious (I owned a black cat for 18 years and often find my best luck on Friday the 13th).

On another trip, we checked on the acorns we’d planted along the edge of the field. John had carefully gathered acorns from the 100-year old white oak trees in front of his parents’ house on Long Island so we’d take a bit of our home with us when we moved.

And there, growing in a little circle, were precisely seven oaks.

Thus we became: Seven Oaks.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Previous Post: « Top 5 Cool Weather Vegetables
Next Post: Eat Your Greens – Spring Greens »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Gardengurl09

    April 15, 2009 at

    I love it. Seems it was meant to be.

  2. Jeanne

    April 16, 2009 at

    Thanks Gardengurl. Yes, the name now suits us. Much better than Seven Buzzards Farm 🙂

  3. Donna Sundblad

    September 16, 2009 at

    I love that story! Thanks for sharing it.

Trackbacks

  1. The 17 Year Cicadas Are Making My Ears Hurt! | Home and Garden Joy says:
    August 12, 2014 at

    […] just lucky I don’t have more than seven oaks on our whole property. Well, I guess we have more than that – we have never surveyed them […]

  2. Welcome to Seven Oaks, Home Garden Joy | Home and Garden Joy says:
    October 22, 2014 at

    […] How Seven Oaks Got Its Name […]

Primary Sidebar

Let’s Connect!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Substack
  • YouTube

Featured by the American Horticulture Society

As Seen in Porch

 As Seen in Porch

We were featured in Porch.com and answered reader's questions about indoor plants.

Explore All Gardening Articles

Latest Articles

  • Christmas Gifts for Gardeners They’ll Love
  • Beginner-Friendly Easy to Grow Vegetables
  • Three Easy Steps to Improve Garden Soil

Herbalism Classes & Supplies

Goods Shop by Herbal Academy – botanically inspired products

Disclosure

Home Garden Joy participates in two affiliate programs: Amazon and The Herbal Academy. Home Garden Joy earns a commission from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate. As an Herbal Academy Associate, HGJ also earns a commission when you sign up for classes or purchase herbs or supplies from The Herbal Academy. Herbal information and recipes on this site are provided for educational purposes only.

Footer

a wheelbarrow with bag of soil, trowel, pots and plants

Three Easy Steps to Improve Garden Soil

When you improve garden soil, you improve the health of your plants. And, you improve the nutrient quality and quantity of fruits, vegetables, and herbs. There’s an old saying in gardening: The better the soil, the healthier the plants. And the healthier the vegetables, fruits, and herbs you grow in your home garden, the healthier…

Read More

raised bed vegetable garden

Beginner’s Tips to Starting a Vegetable Garden

Whether you’re new to backyard gardening or just bought your first home and have always longed for the day when you can plant an organic vegetable garden, these tips for starting a backyard garden offer newcomers to the world of gardening useful information to help you be successful. Vegetable gardening doesn’t need to be expensive,…

Read More

lettuce growing in a raised bed

What to Plant in Early Spring: Vegetable Garden

What to plant in early spring depends on your gardening zone, but there are many great choices for vegetable gardening that can make your backyard garden productive early in the season. Spring Vegetable Gardening With careful planning, the average backyard gardener in most gardening zones in the United States can grow fresh, organic vegetables throughout…

Read More

green beans on the plant

How to Grow Green Beans Organically

Beans – whether green beans, snap beans, heirloom beans, or any other kind of beans – are easy to grow organically. They need warm temperatures, full sunshine, and fertile soil to grow at their best. While there are insect pests that will eat the leaves of bean plants, they generally don’t harm the beans themselves,…

Read More

  • Privacy Policy
  • About
  • Awards

Copyright © 2025 Home Garden Joy on the Foodie Pro Theme