Family History · April 28, 2026
What Apparently Suspicious Means: A Brand Story
How a joke about goat genetics became our name

What Apparently Suspicious Means: A Brand Story
People ask what SUS stands for. We don't have a serious answer. It's not "Sustainable." It's not an acronym at all. It's a reference to a sheep, a genetics joke, and five generations of family deciding that the joke was too funny to abandon.
The Origin: A Brown Lamb Appears
About seven years ago, our black sheep had a brown lamb. This shouldn't happen. Our genetics are locked down—we know every animal, every cross. A brown lamb from black parents is statistically improbable. Not impossible, but... sus.
The lamb was healthy, normal, and completely brown. My father looked at it and said, "That's apparently suspicious." We started calling it "Sus." It stuck. We had a brown sheep named Sus.
Later, another brown lamb appeared from a different pairing. Then another.
We had a genetic mystery. The farm's joke was: "The genetics know things we don't. Something is apparently sus."
How It Became the Brand
Years later, we were building the nursery side of the operation. LaRene, who ran the original nursery, was retiring. We were inheriting the business and wanted a name that was ours. Not "Johnson Nursery." Not "Red Dirt Farms." Something that felt like family, like the inside joke we all lived.
Someone suggested "SUS Farms" as a working title. Joke. Obviously.
Then we realized: it was perfect. It was funny. It was weird. It was honest about how we approach farming—not perfection, but observation. Not by the book, but by what the land and animals tell us.
So we kept it.
Five Generations of Farming
This land has been farmed for over 100 years. My great-grandfather homesteaded here. My grandfather built it into a real operation. My parents expanded it. Now we're running it, and our kids are helping.
Each generation inherited something different. My great-grandfather inherited red dirt. My grandfather inherited labor and tradition. My parents inherited scale and market access. We inherited their experience and all the ways things can go wrong.
And we added: a sense of humor. If you're farming, you need one.
Why We Didn't Change It
Marketing advice says: "A weird name is a liability. Make it professional. Make it forgettable."
We ignored that. Because the name is true. We're a weird operation. We're small. We ask questions. We experiment. Half of what works is unexpected.
People remember weird. People ask. And the asking starts a conversation. And in that conversation, they learn who we are: a family that farms because we have to, because we want to, and because the work matters.

The Name Lives Here Now
SUS Farms is on our trucks. Our website. Our plants' tags. People Googling "nursery near Sevier County" find us because the name is weird enough to stick.
And when people visit and ask, "Why Sus?" we tell them the story. About brown sheep. About genetics. About paying attention. About five generations on red dirt land.
It's a good story. Better than an acronym.
The Lesson
Your weird is your advantage. The things that don't fit, that you think are problems—those are usually the things people remember about you.
What We're Still Discovering
The brown sheep genetics mystery? We still don't fully understand it. Some knowledge takes generations.
A name is just a word until people know the story behind it. Our story is weird. We're keeping it.



