Outstanding in His Field

Organic farmer Chris Katthage, a prior-service Marine, grows produce and herbs for some of the city’s best restaurants. Which may partly explain why he looks so fresh in casual fashion for a mild Texas winter.

Jhane Hoang
Houston tee, $28 at Manready Mercantile; jeans, $205, by Hudson, and jacket, $765,  by Theory, both at Neiman Marcus.

Christopher Katthage doesn’t look like a farmer. Especially with his shirt off. 


A quick glance at his Instagram page — or, OK, a lingering one — will show that, at 36, the occasionally bare-chested prior-service Marine is a very solid 6-foot-2-inches and 210 pounds of unintentionally hip tattoos, neatly groomed chest hair and abs that would make the average washboard quite jealous. But a farmer he is.

Well, he’s a farmer in training actually, at the nonprofit Recipe for Success’ urban farm just a few miles south of the University of Houston, in the historic, predominantly African American district of Sunnyside. It’s called Hope Farms, and, in addition to its founding mission to teach school kids about nutrition and sustainability, it serves both the home cooks in Sunnyside’s “food desert” and dozens of top chefs such as BCN’s Luis Roger, Bistro Menil’s Greg Martin, Coltivare’s Ryan Pera, T-Rex’s Justin Yu and Roost’s Kevin Naderi. The program has been gaining national attention lately, including a Forbes piece a couple months ago that called Recipe and its farm “the largest outreach of its kind” in America.

But as Katthage has observed, the rising cool factor of horticulture is still a bit unsung. “If you tell somebody you’re a farmer, they look at you funny,” he laughs. “They say, ‘Stop messing with me.’ Apparently you’re supposed to have two teeth in your mouth, and a big piece of chaw. Flannel shirt, all that, really country.” Truth be told, Katthage is more Venice Beach than American Gothic. He owes his killer biceps to years of physique training; he even coaches other hardbodies on the side. But really it’s his unique journey to the farm, more than the gun show, that sets him apart. 

He was born in South Africa and spent most of his childhood in Johannesburg, where his first languages were Dutch and Afrikaans. In the ’90s, when the end of apartheid portended tough times for his architect dad, the family relocated to the Houston area. He attended Elkins High in Missouri City and, two days after graduation, he joined the Marines.

Military service is a family tradition, says Katthage, who picked the Marines because “they’re the best.” Having been removed from most of his family through his teen years, he was looking for “a sense of belonging.” He got more than he bargained for when his first duty station turned out to be near the Pentagon, where he bore witness first-hand to the 9/11 attacks. He served two tours in Iraq and one in Afghanistan, plus others in Japan and the Philippines. “I got to travel the world,” he says, “and learned how to survive anywhere on Earth, without any money. You learn life skills. You have pride.” Katthage also married — they later divorced — and had a daughter, now 13. 

After the Marines, he spent another decade globetrotting across Asia, the Middle East and South America, as a recruiter for oil and gas interests including ExxonMobil. It took a toll. “It was so fast-paced,” he explains. “I was getting detached from what life is really about.” When in 2018 he heard about Hope Farms, which exclusively enlists veterans to, as Katthage puts it, “learn the dying craft” of organic farming, he jumped at the opportunity to take on a new challenge and refocus his life and career.

Indeed his skill set is growing fast — from readying seeds and cuttings in a greenhouse to composting, solarization and pollination using local bees. “It’s a sh*t-ton of work,” he says. “We till the beds on our own. We weed on our own.” The 10-acre farm’s current winter harvest includes broccoli, snow peas, turnips, carrots, green onions, herbs such as lemongrass and basil, cabbage varieties like bok choy, and a half dozen different types of kale. 

Katthage sees great career potential for himself in sustainable agriculture. But for now, his rewards go beyond the professional. “The farm itself is a living thing that requires constant care,” he says. “When you take care of something like that that, you have to be giving. You have to care. You have to get back to something fundamental.

“Humans are meant to be kind and caring,” the farmer adds. “Over the years, I think that’s been lost. Out here, you have to be good, honest, hard-working people. And that’s all I want to surround myself with now.”

Styling by Todd Ramos

Grooming by Edward Sanchez for Arched Beauty

Shot on location at Magpie & Peacocks in EaDo

Houston tee, $28 at Manready Mercantile; jeans, $205, by Hudson, and jacket, $765, by Theory, both at Neiman Marcus.
Style
Pelican Builders Welcome Residents To First New Upper Kirby Condo Offering In Years;
Boutique Midrise Adds To Pedestrian Appeal Of Sought-After, Inner Loop Neighborhood

WITH ITS INAUGURAL set of residents newly moved in, Pelican Builders’ mid-rise condominium Westmore at 2323 W Main Street in Upper Kirby is already seeing the blossoming of a tight-knit community. Designed by Houston-based Mirador Group the Westmore is the first new condominium product to be introduced to the in-demand, inner loop neighborhood in more than three years. And with remaining two-bedroom homes starting at $895,000, it’s a remarkable value for this increasingly pricey area, where condos can easily climb to several million dollars and more.

Keep Reading Show less
Home + Real Estate

Cyndy Garza Roberts, Stephanie Ramos, Michele Leal Farah, Vicky Dominguez and Leisa Holland Nelson Bowman

WITH A GOAL of ensuring access to quality healthcare for underserved families in Houston’s East End, El Centro de Corazón has been making a difference for 30 years. Its annual Making a Difference luncheon, this year chaired by Vicky Dominguez with honorary chairs Leisa Holland Nelson Bowman and Leila Perrin, raised more than $150,000.

Keep Reading Show less
Parties

ONE CANNOT ACCUSE Houston’s Axiom Quartet of playing it safe. When it comes to exploring the outer limits of string quartet repertoire, engaging audiences who don’t normally attend classical music concerts, and putting in the collective time necessary to nail the gnarly idiosyncrasies of 20th- and 21st-century composers, Axiom continues to walk the walk as they talk the talk.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment