With beads of sweat trickling down his face and the sun beating down on his back, Boua Chao Xiong spends many days on his hands and knees yanking potatoes and other produce from the dirt.
The 64-year-old man cultivates other crops, such as green beans, with more care as he chats back and forth with relatives who often retreat to the shade. Within view of suburban backyard decks and manicured lawns, Xiong works the land by hand for hours each day. He lugs his own water from home via van in tubs and buckets.
The Brooklyn Park resident is among dozens of Hmong farmers who have a found a hidden space in the suburbs to raise their crops.
But now an incident that an attorney attributes to cultural misunderstanding has threatened the calm and raised questions about whether the farmers will return next summer.
Xiong told Eagan police that a homeowner threatened to kill him and his wife last month over a fence dispute.
Richard Schliesing, who owns land bordering Xiong's plot, faces an August court date on a charge of making terroristic threats, a felony that carries a maximum five-year prison sentence.
"That's the police rendition of what happened," said Schliesing's lawyer, Paul Rogosheske. "He didn't threaten anybody. There's a property dispute. It'll all sort out."
Xiong told police that Schliesing loaded a 12-gauge shotgun in plain view of him and his wife in an effort to intimidate the couple.