2 CapitalPress.com June 9, 2017 People & Places Helping the next generation Nellie McAdams asks: Who are the next farmers and where is their land? Established 1928 Board of directors Mike Forrester Steve Forrester Kathryn Brown Susan Rana Mike Omeg Corporate Officer John Perry Chief Operating Officer Capital Press Managers Joe Beach ..................Editor & Publisher Elizabeth Yutzie Sell .... Advertising Director Carl Sampson ................Managing Editor Barbara Nipp ......... Production Manager Samantha McLaren .... Circulation Manager By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press GASTON, Ore. — It was the most telling sentiment Nellie McAdams heard as she toured the state, putting on workshops to help farmers and ranchers with the gut- wrenching question of what will happen to their land when they retire. It was beautiful and trag- ic in the same breath. “We’re so blessed to have this land,” someone would say. “It’s such a burden.” It summed up an aspect of Oregon agriculture, maybe the emotional ledger, that may not be seen in other business- es. After all, McAdams said, not many other business own- ers live where they work. “It’s more than just land,” she said. “It’s heirloom, lega- cy, your family heritage. Be- ing a farmer isn’t just an occu- pation, it’s an identity. “You can’t retire from be- ing yourself,” McAdams said. “You’re passing over what makes you, you.” But eventually, farmland must be passed on to some- one, somehow. A son or daughter may be interested in taking over, but sometimes they are not. Sometimes par- ents aren’t willing to let go. And sometimes, dealing with the situation is like pulling the bandage off family wounds. Sale to a stranger has its own pitfalls. Oregon has many earnest agricultural neophytes, but how many can afford land and equipment? If another farm is the buyer, will it operate with the same care as generations of family mem- bers? To McAdams, Farm Pres- ervation Program director for Rogue Farm Corps, the suc- cession question has emerged as one of the most critical is- sues facing Oregon agriculture. Among other work, Rogue Farm Corps trains beginning farmers, placing them in intern- ships with commercial farms. McAdams specializes in farm succession, and has put on workshops statewide to get farm families thinking about Capital Press Entire contents copyright © 2017 EO Media Group dba Capital Press An independent newspaper published every Friday. Capital Press (ISSN 0740-3704) is published weekly by EO Media Group, 1400 Broadway St. NE, Salem OR 97301. Periodicals postage paid at Portland, OR, and at additional mailing offices. Eric Mortenson/Capital Press Nellie McAdams at her family’s hazelnut farm near Gaston, Ore., which she is taking over from her parents. She helps farmers develop succession plans that will keep farmland in production. POSTMASTER: send address changes to Capital Press, P.O. Box 2048 Salem, OR 97308-2048. To Reach Us Western Innovator Circulation ......................... 800-882-6789 Email ........ Circulation@capitalpress.com Main line ........................... 503-364-4431 Fax ................................... 503-370-4383 Advertising Fax ................ 503-364-2692 Nellie McAdams Occupation: Farm Preservation Pro- gram director, Rogue Farm Corps. Personal: 37, grew up in Southwest Portland but spent weekends at the family’s hazelnut farm in Gaston, Ore. Her father, David, is a retired attorney; her mother, Nita, is a retired teacher. Education: Bachelor’s degree in philosophy from Dartmouth College, law degree from Lewis & Clark College. Career path: Consultant with Ecotrust, staff attorney for Friends of Family Farmers, now with Rogue Farm Corps, http://www.rog- uefarmcorps.org/, which provides training for beginning farmers. Also on the board of directors for East Multnomah Soil and Water Conservation District in the Portland area. Eric Mortenson/Capital Press Nellie McAdams walks down a row in her family’s hazelnut orchard. The family has about 400 acres, including about 100 acres in hazelnut trees, 150 in second-growth timber and about 150 acres leased for clover seed, grass seed and winter wheat. how they want to handle the transition. It’s an issue McAdams is familiar with; she’s taking over the family farm from her parents. The family has about 400 acres, including about 100 acres in hazelnut trees, 150 in second-growth timber and about 150 acres leased for clo- ver seed, grass seed and winter wheat. In her workshops, McAd- ams urges farmers to consult with an estate attorney, and maybe even a family coun- selor. McAdams would like to see a program, perhaps through OSU Extension, that makes more farm succession experts available to help fam- ilies work through the finan- cial and personal issues. She urges people to start planning. “A lot of farmers don’t know what the next step is,” she said. Again, she’s working from experience. Her father, David McAdams, is an estate attor- ney who worked the farm on weekends, and the family had its own work to do when it came time for succession planning. Her specialty: Farm succession research and planning. Notable: From December to May did 38 presentations, traveling 7,260 miles and speaking to 1,396 people. News Staff N. California Tim Hearden .................... 530-605-3072 E Idaho John O’Connell ................. 208-421-4347 Idaho Carol Ryan Dumas .......... 208-860-3898 Boise Sean Ellis .......................... 208-914-8264 Central Washington Dan Wheat ........................ 509-699-9099 E Washington Matthew Weaver .............. 509-688-9923 Common thread: Even as they reach or surpass retirement age, farmers and ranchers have intense physical and emotional ties to the land, and it is difficult for them to let go. Oregon Eric Mortenson ................ 503-412-8846 Mateusz Perkowski .......... 800-882-6789 Groundbreaking work: Co-wrote “The Future of Oregon Agricultural Land” with cohorts from Oregon State University and Portland State University. Report showed average age of Oregon farmers is near 60, and that 64 percent of state ag land could change hands over the next two decades as they retire or die. “How that land changes hands, who acquires it, and what they do with the land will impact Oregon for generations,” the report said. Graphic artist Alan Kenaga ..................... 800-882-6789 Seeking solutions: She’s among the backers of House Bill 3249 in the Oregon Legislature. The bill includes funding for working land easements, covenants and conservation management plans, as well as succession training and a tax study. To Place Classified Ads Ad fax .............................. 503-364-2692 or ...................................... 503-370-4383 Telephone (toll free) .......... 800-882-6789 Online ......www.capitalpress.com/classifieds Subscriptions Mail rates paid in advance Easy Pay U.S. $3.75/month (direct with- drawal from bank or credit card account) They agreed to set it up in a way that Nellie McAdams will be able to take over the farm and buy out her younger brother, who loves the farm but wasn’t interested in farm- ing. But every Christmas, just to be sure, the family takes out the will and talks it over. 1 year U.S. ...................................$49.99 2 years U.S. .................................$89.99 1 year Canada .................................$275 1 year other countries ......... call for quote 1 year Internet only .......................$49.99 1 year 4-H, FFA students and teachers ....$30 Calendar Sponsored by: To submit an event go to the Community Events calendar on the home page of our website at www. capitalpress.com and click on “Sub- mit an Event.” Calendar items can also be mailed to Capital Press, 1400 Broadway St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 or emailed to newsroom@ capitalpress.com. Saturday, June 10 PDX Hempfest Expo. 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Portland Expo Center, 2060 N. Marine Drive, Portland, Ore. More than 100 exhibitors and 40 speakers on subjects such as best practices. Cost: $20. Website: http://pdxhemp- festexpo.com/ Wednesday, June 14 Six-week Forestry Short Course. 9 a.m.-noon. Federal Building meeting room, Seventh Street and College Avenue, St. Maries, Idaho. This course will be six successive Wednesdays. The $38 fee includes resource material. Register by phone at 208-245-2422 before June 7. Thursday-Friday June 15-16 2017 Interpera Congress. Wenatchee Confluence Technolo- gy Center, 285 Technology Center Way, Wenatchee, Wash. The con- ference features presentations from world experts on emerg- ing pear varieties, high-density planting, root stock, harvest and packing house mechanization, integrated pest management suc- cesses, export trade flows and successful practices for building consumer demand. http://ncwctc. com. Friday-Sunday June 16-18 Glenwood Ketchum Kalf Ro- deo and Bull Bash. Glenwood Rodeo Grounds, Trout Lake High- way, Glenwood, Wash. The Bull Bash starts at 7 p.m. June 16, fol- lowed by the rodeo, which starts at 12:30 p.m. June 17-18. Website: http://business.gorge.net/ glenwoodrodeo. Saturday, June 17 Forest Thinning and Pruning Field Day. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. University of Idaho Extension office, 1808 N. Third St., Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. Whether you have problems with insects, disease or concerns about fire, the response from foresters is nearly universal: Thin your forest. Presentations about thinning and financial assistance will be followed by a field trip to a thinned stand. A $20 fee includes a field notebook or publications. Register by June 9. Tuesday, June 20 Trees and Taxes workshop. 5-7:30 p.m. Coos County Exten- sion Office, 631 Alder St., Myrtle Point, Ore. This class is for anyone with forest management expenses, recent forest income or planning for future income from their forestland. Tammy Cushing, Extension specialist in forest economics, management and policy, will explain topics many landowners are unaware of and the special provisions in the Inter- nal Revenue Code that pertain to forestland and income generated from the land. This session will help improve the records you keep on your forestland as well as minimize the taxes that you pay for income generated by your forest. Pre-reg- istration is required by June 16. For questions, call Shawna at 541-572- 5263. Website: http://extension.ore- gonstate.edu/coos/. Tuesday-Wednesday June 20-21 Center for Produce Safety Re- search Symposium. Hyatt Regency Denver Tech Center, 7800 E. Tufts Ave., Denver, Colo. Agricultural wa- ter will kick off the program agen- da. This session will focus on four CPS-funded research programs that will help stakeholders better under- stand the factors involved in sourc- ing, sampling, testing and treating specific types of agricultural water. Thursday, June 22 Oregon Angus Field Day. 4-10 p.m. Quail Valley Ranch, Prineville, GASES / WELDING / SAFETY / FIRE www.oxarc.com Ore. Cattle on display, contests with prizes, a meal and a time to visit. For more information, contact Becky Tekansik, Quail Valley Ranch, 541- 699-8562, or Dick Hubman, presi- dent of the Oregon Angus Associa- tion, 541-601-5495. Saturday, June 24 Washington State Dairy Am- bassador Coronation. 5-9 p.m. By- rnes Performing Arts Center, 18821 Crown Ridge Blvd., Arlington, Wash. Doors open at 5 p.m. with the pro- gram beginning at 5:30. This year dinner will not be provided; instead there will be light hors d’oeuvres and refreshments served during a short intermission. Tickets purchased by June 16 will be adults $20, students $10, and under 6 years free. Tickets purchased after June 16 or at the door will be adults $25, students $15, under 6 still free. For ticket information, please contact Gloria Edwards by email at gloria.wsdw@ hotmail.com or 360-273-7313. Web- site: http://wastatedairywomen.org/ ambassador-contest.html Tuesday, June 27 Range Field Day. 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Northern Great Basin Exper- imental Range, 100 Placidea Butte Road, Riley, Ore. Presentations will include managing wildfires, livestock grazing for fuels manage- ment, safe sites and restoration of sagebrush rangeland. For more information, contact Chad Boyd, office: 541-573-8939, cell: 541- 589-4990, email: chad.boyd@or- egonstate.edu. To RSVP for lunch, call Petrina White at 541-573-4085. Wednesday-Saturday June 28-July 1 128th Annual Washington State Grange Convention. Ocean Shores Convention Center, 120 W. Chance a La Mer NW, Ocean Shores, Wash. Thursday-Friday June 29-30 3rd International Conference on Livestock & Nutrition. 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Avani Atrium, 880 Phetch- 20 Northwest Locations 1-800-765-9055 aburi Road, Bangkok, Thailand. The Bangkok Livestock Nutri- tion Conference welcomes at- tendees, presenters and exhibi- tors from all over the world. The theme is “Leading Innovation in Livestock for Sustainable Farming.” Cost: $699. Website: http://livestocknutrition.confer- enceseries.com/. old West to the north Willamette Valley each 4th of July and to give those who attend a look at one of the nation’s finest professional rodeos and some of the most ex- citing and colorful entertainment offered anywhere. Information: (503) 633-2011, tickets@stpaul- rodeo.com, Website: http://www. stpaulrodeo.com/ Friday, June 30 Saturday-Tuesday July 1-4 Farm Practices to Support Beneficial Insects. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Day 2 of this two-day class will offer a tour of Wandering Fields farm in the Applegate area. Par- ticipants will practice identifying beneficials and observe how a blend of hedgerows, cover crops, flowering seed crops and native plants creates a system of bio- logical pest management. Par- ticipation on Day 1 on June 9 is a requirement to attend the tour. Instructor: Dana Kristal and local experts. Cost: $15 one/$25 two from the same farm. Website: http://bit.ly/JacksonSmallFarm- Dream. Bark Beetle Field Day. 8 a.m.- 5 p.m. University of Idaho Exten- sion Kootenai County office, 1808 N. Third St., Coeur d’Alene, Ida- ho. Participants will get first-hand exposure to major bark beetles’ biology and research into con- trolling bark beetles. Pre-register by June 23. Cost: $20 ($22 with a credit card at www.uidaho.edu/ BarkBeetle) Website: www.uida- ho.edu/extension/forestry Wednesday-Saturday June 28-July 1 128th Annual Washington State Grange Convention. Ocean Shores Convention Center, 120 W. Chance a La Mer NW, Ocean Shores, Wash. Friday-Tuesday June 30-July 4 St. Paul Rodeo. Rodeo Arena, 20045 Fourth St. NE, St. Paul, Ore. The St. Paul Rodeo will continue to bring a slice of the 9 months 4-H, FFA students & teachers .....$25 Visa and Mastercard accepted To get information published Mailing address: Capital Press P.O. Box 2048 Salem, OR 97308-2048 News: Contact the main office or news staff member closest to you, send the in- formation to newsroom@capitalpress.com or mail it to “Newsroom,” c/o Capital Press. Include a contact telephone number. Molalla Buckeroo Rodeo, 815 Shirley St., Molalla, Ore. The Mo- lalla Buckeroo Rodeo has been an Oregon tradition since September 1913. 503-829-8388. Website: http://www.molallabuckeroo.com/ Letters to the Editor: Send your comments on agriculture-related public issues to opinions@capitalpress.com, or mail your letter to “Opinion,” c/o Capital Press. Letters should be limited to 300 words. Deadline: Noon Monday. Thursday-Sunday July 6-9 Capital Press ag media Marion County Fair. Oregon State Fairgrounds, 2330 17th St. NE, Salem, Ore. Website: http:// www.co.marion.or.us/CS/Fair Friday-Saturday July 7-8 Idaho State Ram Sale. Twin Falls County Fair Grounds, 215 Fair Ave., Filer, Idaho. The “Suffolk Show of the West” be- gins at 6 p.m. Friday and con- tinues at 10:30 a.m. Saturday. For more information, call 208- 344-2271 or email idahowool@ gmail.com Website: idahowool. org Friday, July 14- Sunday, July 30 California State Fair. 10 a.m.- 10 p.m. Cal Expo Center, 1600 Exposition Blvd., Sacramento, Calif. Website: www.castatefair. org/ Saturday, July 15 Washington State Sheep Pro- ducers Ram and Ewe Sale. 1:30- 6 p.m. Grant County Fairgrounds, 3953 Airway Drive NE, Moses Lake, Wash. For questions, call 509-200-2112. 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