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Getting On a Harvest Crew as a Domestic Worker

How a US worker finds harvest-crew work without going through H-2A. Where to look, when to look, what to bring.

What this pathway is

This is for a US citizen or legal resident who wants seasonal harvest work on a potato crew — not as an H-2A guest worker, but as a domestic hire. Most harvest crews are a mix: a year-round core of operators and mechanics, plus seasonal hires for the dig that are some combination of returning local workers, H-2A workers, and walk-on domestic hires. There is room for domestic hires every year on most crews. You have to know when to ask and where to look.

What the work is

The dig is three to five weeks of 12 to 16 hour days, seven days a week, mid-September through late October depending on the region. Typical entry roles for a walk-on domestic hire:

Pay is usually hourly with overtime past 40, plus a possible end-of-harvest bonus tied to attendance. Many operations pay weekly during harvest.

When to start looking

Where to actually look

Direct. The most reliable path is direct to the operation. If you have a region in mind, find the grower's office number or careers page and call. Calling beats applying online for seasonal ag work — the office staff often book the crew directly.

State workforce systems. Each state has one. Walk in to the office closest to where you want to work — do not just browse online. The staff know which operations are hiring and who to call.

Job boards.

Grower associations. Most major potato states have one. The associations do not hire directly but member directories are the cleanest source for finding who is who.

If you are looking in a region not listed, search "[state] potato growers association" — most major potato states have one.

Word of mouth. If you know anyone who has worked a harvest, ask them which operation is good and who to call. The industry runs on referrals. Showing up with "Bill from such-and-such operation told me to call" opens more doors than a cold application.

What to bring on Day 1

(For the full Week One packet, see Week One on a Harvest Crew.)

What this pathway is NOT

This is not a permanent year-round job out of the gate. A walk-on domestic hire for harvest is exactly that — three to five weeks of intense work. Some hands turn it into a year-round position by being the one who does not quit and shows up early. Most do not. Plan accordingly.

This is also not a path that avoids H-2A workers. You will work alongside them on most crews. The crews are mixed by design. Treat your coworkers like coworkers.

National resources

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