Our story

A SoCal home for ideas, effort, family, and future luck.

Rooted in Southern California, where inland hills, ocean air, family life, and entrepreneurial momentum all share the same horizon.

A quiet Southern California beach in soft morning light

Definition

Me Lucky Farms is not a traditional farm. It is a philosophy with a place to live.

It holds current and future ventures without forcing them into one narrow business model. Some crops are properties. Some are tools. Some are health journeys, family ventures, investments, relationships, adventures, and opportunities that have not been named yet.

Origin

A name with a wink.

Born on Leprechaun Lane, the idea started playfully: a shamrock, a little luck, a nod to charm, and a name that could make people smile.

Shift

The joke got deeper.

Over time, the name began to say something true. Luck was not random. It was the visible part of preparation, generosity, curiosity, and steady work.

Now

A home for what grows.

Me Lucky Farms became the umbrella for ideas, property, technology, wellness, family ventures, investments, relationships, and future opportunities.

Next

The field stays open.

We keep the field intentionally broad because the future is not finished. The best crops may still be a conversation, a person, or a possibility waiting for a first step.

The cultivator

Amy.

Every strong philosophy eventually has to become a person in motion. For Me Lucky Farms, that person is Amy. She is not the corporate owner in this story — she is the cultivator: the one who helps people create better conditions for good things to grow.

In health, family, friendship, and hard seasons, she carries the philosophy in real life. She sees strength early, encourages it before it is obvious, and stays with the work long enough for it to take root.

Read Amy’s field note

How luck gets grown

The operating system.

01

See the seed.

Every venture starts as a signal: a property with potential, a person worth backing, a tool that could help, a season that needs strength, or a door that just cracked open.

02

Prepare the soil.

We study the context, gather what is needed, remove avoidable friction, and create the conditions where the idea has a real chance to take root.

03

Tend the field.

Good things need attention after the first spark. We build, test, repair, encourage, improve, and stay with the work long enough to learn what it wants to become.

04

Share the harvest.

The best outcomes do not stop with one person. A strong harvest creates momentum, memories, relationships, stronger places, and more seeds for the next season.

There is room in this field for what comes next.

Explore the crops