Meet The owners
Joseph T. Chester Jr
Co-OwnerThis farm isn’t just something I started, it’s something I was born into.
I grew up around hard work, early mornings, and doing things the right way, even when it wasn’t the easy way. That mindset never left. Today, I carry that same standard into everything we do at Double Trouble Supply Co.—from how we raise our animals to how we deliver our products.
Right now, we’re focused on eggs, vegetables, and compost, real, honest products people can rely on. But this isn’t where it stops.
We’re building this farm back to what it was meant to be. That means expanding into beekeeping, more farm-grown goods, and anything else that brings real, quality products straight from our land to your table.
For me, this isn’t about selling eggs.
It’s about bringing real food back to people who are tired of the fake, mass-produced stuff.
No shortcuts. No nonsense. Just quality you can trust.
Ryan Drivanos
Co-OwnerI’m a United States Marine, and I carry that same mindset into everything we do here.
This farm runs on discipline, consistency, and doing things right—no shortcuts. I’m hands-on every day making sure the animals are taken care of, the work gets done the way it should, and the standards stay where they belong.
To me, this isn’t just about producing food, it’s about how it’s done. The animals come first. If they’re not given the best quality of life, then nothing we produce means anything.
Joe isn’t just a business partner, he’s like a brother. We see this the same way. In a world that doesn’t slow down and cuts corners, we’re building something real. Something honest.
This land means something. And we’re here to bring it back to what it was meant to be.
The Foundation
Samuel R. Britton Sr
FounderGrandfather of Joe Chester, Samuel R. Britton Sr. was a master mason, Chief of Police, farmer, and family man.
He was built on hard work, discipline, and responsibility—values that carried through everything he did. Whether it was serving his community, working the land, or providing for his family, he did it with pride and without shortcuts.
Farming was never easy, and he never pretended it was. It takes long days, real effort, and the understanding that the animals and the land depend on you to show up and do your job right—every single day.
He passed away in 2018, but the foundation he built is still standing.
He is the reason I have the passion I do for this farm and for these animals. And even on the hardest days, what he taught still holds true—
you keep pushing, and you never quit.
The BackboneLillian “Babe” Britton
Wife of Samuel R. Britton Sr. and grandmother of Joe Chester, Lillian “Babe” Britton was the definition of strength and capability.
She could do it all—captain a boat, work on vehicles, run the farm—and do it better than most. She had a way of outworking and outlasting everyone around her, never slowing down and never backing away from a challenge.
There wasn’t much she didn’t know. From the land to the animals to the day-to-day work that keeps a farm running, she understood it all—and she lived it.
The tradition of raising chickens and selling eggs runs through her. It’s part of what she built, and part of what still lives on today.
She passed away in 2021, but her work, her knowledge, and her drive are still felt here—every single day.