 Well, for this week's Community Spotlight, we get into the fall spirit and take a visit to the farm on St. Matthias in Brainerd to check out their autumn attractions. Our Logan Gay has more. For 10 years, the farm on St. Matthias has been opening up the doors to their beautiful 80-acre farm for their annual fall festival. It usually begins about mid-September, so it's a good six weeks, and we usually close down just before Halloween. For many fall, it's one of the most beloved times of year, and the farm on St. Matthias has become a highly anticipated destination to create family memories. It's a nice day out, Sonny, so it's a place to be. A great, great way to spend family fun days, to come out and get your kids outside, run around in places where you don't have to worry about traffic or other people, where it's all about having fun and being together as a family and creating memories, and that's what we do. The farm has many activities to give visitors ready for fall, such as pumpkins, hay-rise, and even mazes. We have two corn mazes. We have the children's corn mazes, which is about, I'd say, two to three acres, and then the adult corn mazes, about six acres. But beware, choose your mazes wisely. If you're not paying close enough attention, you might get lost. We have lost a few people in there. We have had to go in and get people out. We have an entrance and an exit. Most people are able to look and see landmarks and find their way out. So once you make it to the center of the maze, kids can pick out their favorite book from the Book Nook. So the two-acre maze is two to three, is small, no dead ends, circular trails, and all paths lead to the center where we have sun umbrellas and a reading nook with chairs, so parents can take books out of the book library and sit down and read to their kids inside the corn maze to take a break and then come back out. And there's a scavenger hunt in there for the little kids. But at the end of the day, the farm on St. Matthias wants everyone to know that no matter what season it is, it's always about the family. We are a family-operated farm. We do. This is a food production farm. And so we're not an amusement park. We are an opportunity for people to get on to a real family working farm and experience what that's like. And so folks will see our animals and our food production and how we try to keep the farm in its biodiversity in order to keep producing food for us as well. The Fall Festival is open to the public on Saturdays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sundays, noon to five. And Brainerd, Logan Gaye, Lakeland News. And on Saturdays in October, the farm on St. Matthias gives visitors a unique opportunity to see the resident and blacksmith at work as well. So take that in as well. If you've enjoyed this segment of Lakeland News, please consider making a tax-deductible contribution to Lakeland Public Television.