
Quarterbridge Farm
A small household on Sourland Mountain. Chickens, a historic bridge, and a few quiet tools that keep life moving.
Hillsborough Township, New Jersey
Household tools
Each top tab has a real place to land: the thing itself, its APIs, and the repo(s) that keep it alive. Less magic, more machinery.

Cat Dashboard
SureFeed consumption dashboard + refresh/backup pipeline. CSV is canonical; Mongo is optional analytics.

AI Feed
AI provider announcements scored for fintech relevance. Filterable feed + API for programmatic access.

Farm Hand
QB: the automation layer. The stuff that runs the household quietly (alerts, cron, integrations).
The Bridge
Quarterbridge Farm gets its name from something unusual: we own one quarter of one of the oldest bridges in New Jersey. It's a stone arch bridge over Cattail Brook, and it's been standing since before anyone can quite remember.
The bridge isn't grand. It doesn't carry highway traffic or appear on postcards. But it's ours β a quarter of it, anyway β and there's something grounding about owning a piece of infrastructure that's outlasted generations. We named the farm after it.

The Chickens π
The real stars of Quarterbridge Farm are the flock. They roam the property, provide eggs, and have survived more drama than most soap operas β including a hawk attack where our 8-year-old son ran out to defend them.
We monitor the coop with cameras (Peanut Cam is a fan favorite) and have gotten pretty good at chicken first aid along the way. Farm life isn't always glamorous, but it's never boring.
Fresh Eggs
Daily, weather permitting
Coop Cams
24/7 chicken surveillance
Sourland Life
385 ft up, always interesting
Sourland Mountain
The farm sits at about 385 feet on Sourland Mountain β technically more of a big ridge than a mountain, but the microclimate is real. We run colder, wetter, and foggier than the Hillsborough flatlands just a few miles below.
Our weather station (live dashboard) tracks conditions in real-time. People around here check it regularly β Sourland weather and valley weather can be two different things, especially in winter.
