April 17, 2015 CapitalPress.com 5 Northview Orchard is a one-man operation By HEATHER SMITH THOMAS It was a good year last year; people came to pick clear into November. There were still apples on the trees when it froze,” he says. For the Capital Press $15,000 1988 Weiss JD239 Sweeper $27,500 1996 Weiss 8900SP Harvester “Some years I sell most of it, but last year was such a heavy crop I couldn’t sell it all; the deer ate what was left.” Heather Smith Thomas/For the Capital Press Kent Reinke stands next to the sign for his Northview Orchard near Buhl, Idaho. as eastern and southern Idaho to pick fruit. Many are repeat customers. “I put a (page) on Face- book last year and more peo- ple started coming. I post photos of the fruit as it gets ripe. I used to just have an ad in the newspaper but many of the newer people in our area don’t get the paper. So I go on Facebook and Craig’s list and advertise that way,” he says. “About 200 people follow my postings on Facebook. When the trees start bloom- ing I take pictures. I recently posted photos of pruning the trees,” he says. His family helps during the peak season. “My mom and dad come from Gooding and help $17,500 1996 Weiss JD40 Sweeper $17,500 1998 Weiss 8900 Harvester during the busy season; my mom likes running the fruit stand. My brother sometimes comes on weekends.” He doesn’t hire any help, and does all the tree care him- self. His grandparents had the orchard while Kent was grow- ing up, and he enjoyed spend- ing time there. He joined the military and then worked on the Alaska pipeline for 23 years. “I got tired of the cold and the snow, and came back to the orchard,” he says. Idaho weather can be a challenge, too. “Some years the blooms freeze and you have noth- ing, and other years there is more fruit than you can sell. $38,950 2006 Weiss JD80LP Sweeper $35,000 1996 Thomas Shuttle Truck HENRY COLOMBO EQUIPMENT 209-531-8398 • henry@colomboequipment.com www.colomboequipment.com • Free Delivery California-Oregon ONV15-1/#18 This one-man orchard is a full-time job for Kent Reinke. “My grandparents put in the orchard in the 1950s,” said Reinke, who bought it from his uncle 3 years ago. “Some of my trees are from that orig- inal stock. He has 4 walnut trees, 20 types of apples, 10 types of peaches and several types of apricots. “I’ve been planting more cherries, and now have 6 dif- ferent types of cherries,” he says. Almost everything is mar- keted by U-pick, except the nuts. “I have a little fruit stand by the house, and people come to buy or pick,” he says. “I don’t have many nuts so I just put those in bags. The customers pick everything else, except the apricots. Those trees are too tall. Someone might get up there with a ladder and knock the apricots off. “I pick those myself and sell them at our fruit shed, and take some to the Buhl farm- ers’ market, and sometimes the Gooding farmers’ mar- ket,” he says. The orchard is 7 miles northeast of Buhl at the edge of a canyon. People come from Utah and Nevada as well He doesn’t worry about fruit that doesn’t sell. It drops from the trees and he disks it into the ground as fertilizer, or the deer eat it. ONV15-7/#4X