Indigo Moon, Inc. owners and operators are Kris Moody and Ellen Willis.
Ellen Willis is a licensed clinical mental health counselor. She specializes in child, youth and family therapy. Ellen continues to maintain her Special Education teaching certification. Ellen enjoys spending time outdoors with her horses, alpacas and honey bees. Find more information about Ellen’s therapy practices at her website, Ellen Willis, LCMHC PLLC.
Kris Moody is on the farm full time, having retired after more than 40 years working as a designer in the semiconductor industry. Kris’s focus is alpaca farming and fiber production, as well as bee keeping, gardening and simply enjoying the wonders of the natural world.
Indigo Moon, Inc. History and Description
Indigo Moon Farm is located in the rolling plain of coastal southeastern New Hampshire. Indigo Moon Farm sits just below the lakes region at the foothills of the White Mountains, within reach of the Atlantic Ocean just to the east.
We are located on N’dakinna, which is the traditional ancestral homeland of the Abenaki, Pennacook, and Wabanaki Peoples, past and present. We acknowledge and honor with gratitude the land and waterways and the alnobak (people) who have stewarded N’dakinna throughout the generations.
Land acknowledgement thanks to Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective
Indigo as a color is a rich, deep blue used as a popular die color for textiles going back centuries. Indigo on the color spectrum was long considered to be one of the 7 divisions of the rainbow, as first introduce by Isaac Newton. Our blue jeans, worn for work and play, are blue as a result of indigo dye. In some spiritual traditions, indigo represents the sixth chakra including the third eye, and relates to intuition and spiritual knowledge.