2 CapitalPress.com May 22, 2015 People & Places Group with big vision promotes small-scale ag Nick Cockrell helps small farm owners learn best practices for raising animals By DON JENKINS Capital Press ROCHESTER, Wash. — There are a few main things to know about the Washington State Livestock Coalition. One, despite its name, it’s a small organization with about 60 members, mostly residents of Thurston County in Western Washington. “You have to have a vision,” coalition President Nick Cockrell said. “The vision is, we promote education and opportunities statewide.” Second, the group was formed in anger. The first meet- ing in 2009 drew about 100 peo- ple upset with what they saw as law enforcement’s heavy-hand- ed response to allegations of an- imal neglect. One can imagine more popular causes, but rural residents thought sick and aging animals were being reported as mistreated livestock by passing observers. “Sometimes these things are not as cut-and-dried as people driving by might think,” Cock- rell said. Third, coalition volunteers have helped struggling livestock owners with advice and hay. The group isn’t an animal rescue or- ganization, but twice it has taken and found homes for horses and goats whose owners could no longer handle the responsibility. Fourth, the organization has expanded its interests. It has organized seminars on farm topics such as animal disease, pasture management and back- yard poultry and has ambitions to do more. “I see us as trying to provide help for people inter- ested in agriculture, who want to grow their own food or maintain Don Jenkins/Capital Press Washington State Livestock Coalition President Nick Cockrell and his wife, Sandra, greet their 2-year- old pinto Picasso at their farm near Rochester, Wash. The coalition organizes seminars on small-scale agricultural practices. Western Innovator Nick Cockrell Age: 67 Location: Rochester, Wash., where he raises horses with his wife, Sandra Position: Washington State Livestock Coalition president; helped found the organization in 2009. Background: Retired in 2014 as facilities asset manager for the Washington Department of Enterprise Services; grew up on a dairy in Texas. a life rooted in farming,” Cock- rell said. Cockrell, 67, and his wife, Sandra, raise and sell Arabian and pinto horses on their farm outside Rochester in rural south- ern Thurston County. By the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s generous defi- nition — having the ability to raise $1,000 worth of a crop — Thurston County has 1,336 farms. That’s more farms than in Whitman, Adams or Franklin counties — all huge agricultur- al producing areas in southeast Washington. Measured in dol- lars, however, Thurston Coun- ty’s farm output is comparative- ly small. Retired veterinarian Ever- ett Macomber witnessed how agriculture changed over four decades of treating large ani- mals in the south Puget Sound. A former member of the Amer- ican Veterinary Medical Associ- ation and charter member of the livestock coalition, Macomber said the small dairies are virtu- ally gone and knowledge about animal husbandry has declined. Rural residents, however, still want horses for pets and cows for eating, he said. “It’s fine, until there’s a prob- lem,” he said. “A lot of times they don’t have the knowledge to recognize what’s normal from abnormal.” Problems can arise from live- stock owners having too little money and too little experience, Macomber said. Also, there’s the matter of shifting societal attitudes about what constitutes humane livestock treatment. Back in 2009, Cockrell and others were concerned that such animal owners were being too quickly targeted for felony pros- ecution, rather than neighborly help. “We felt there were cir- cumstances not being resolved in a reasonable manner,” he said. The Stockmen’s Coalition for the Just Treatment of Own- ers and Livestock was formed. The group changed its name in 2012 to the Washington State Livestock Coalition to reflect in- terest in sheep, goats and poul- try, as well as horses and cows. It has an annual operating bud- get of $3,000 to $5,000, raised from dues and an annual fund- raising horse ride through the Capitol Forest in June. Cockrell and Macomber agree that concerns about how animal cruelty laws are enforced have eased over the past several years. These days, the coalition is more focused on educating animal owners, including pro- spective food producers. In February, the coalition and Thurston County Farm Bu- reau co-sponsored a seminar in Lacey on raising chickens in an urban environment. The idea for the workshop sprang from a news report on upscale chicken coops in Seattle, Sandra Cock- rell said. “It just blew me away. Peo- ple were spending $1,000 on chicken coops that looked liked the Titanic, a biplane or the Taj Mahal,” she said. About 40 people attended. As a follow-up, the coalition and Farm Bureau will present in June a workshop on “humane methods of chicken processing.” Thurston County Farm Bureau President Bruce Mor- gan said the two groups have overlapping membership and complementary roles. While the Farm Bureau works on reg- ulatory affairs, the coalition fills a need to develop new farmers, he said. “We can have some major synergy working on these edu- cational things,” Morgan said. “I fully anticipate they’ll be able to the same kind of co-sponsored seminars with Lewis and Clark counties and right on through the state.” Geoduck farming takes off as demand for clams grows in Asia By PHUONG LE Associated Press HARSTINE ISLAND, Wash. — John King plunges his arm up to his shoulder into the mudflats of Puget Sound, roots around and soon pulls from the muck the world’s largest burrowing clam. The mollusk squirts water from its long ob- scene-looking neck. King dodges the spray, already using a water hose to loosen sand and harvest the next one. Within hours, the geoduck — pronounced gooey duck — is packed live on ice at nearby Tay- lor Shellfish Farms — on its way to be served raw as sashimi or added to hot-pot dishes to satisfy a growing appetite for the unique Pacific Northwest delicacy. “It’s gained this luxury sta- tus. A big driver is the growing middle class in China,” said Gina Shamshak, an assistant econom- ics professor at Goucher College, who has researched the geoduck market. She added: “They want to consume the higher-valued seafood items, and geoduck is one of them.” Last year, the U.S. exported $74 million, or about 11 million pounds, worth of live wild and farmed geoduck, mostly to China and Hong Kong. That’s double the volume and value exported in 2008. An average clam weighs about 2 pounds and can fetch up to $100 per pound overseas. Demand in Asia is prompting shellfish farmers to grow more of the clams along Washington’s private tidelands. Several new farms have been permitted in recent years, despite challenges from opponents concerned about plastic pollution, aesthetics and potential environmental harm. And now, backed by new research showing mostly short- lived, localized environmental effects, the state is preparing for the first time to lease 15 acres of public tidelands for geoduck aquaculture. The native geoduck, which comes from a Native American word meaning “dig deep,” has been dug recreation- ally in Northwest intertidal areas for decades, and it thrives in the inland waters of Washington, Alaska and British Columbia. Capital Press Established 1928 Board of directors Mike Forrester ..........................President Steve Forrester Kathryn Brown Sid Freeman .................. Outside director Mike Omeg .................... Outside director Corporate officer John Perry Chief operating officer Capital Press Managers Mike O’Brien .............................Publisher Joe Beach ..................................... Editor Elizabeth Yutzie Sell .... Advertising Director Carl Sampson ................Managing Editor Barbara Nipp ......... Production Manager Samantha McLaren .... Circulation Manager Entire contents copyright © 2015 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. POSTMASTER: send address changes to Capital Press, P.O. Box 2048 Salem, OR 97308-2048. To Reach Us Toll free ............................. 800-882-6789 Main line ........................... 503-364-4431 Fax ................................... 503-370-4383 Advertising Fax ................ 503-364-2692 News Staff N. 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TAYLOR For the Capital Press T OWNER, N.D. — The hills are alive with the sound of music again this year on the ranch. And, beyond the hills, in the last two weeks, we’ve attended a violin recital, a band concert, a piano recital and a choral performance to test the acoustics of our school gym and two churches. Our kids have been dressed up in their “good clothes” al- most as much as their “ranch clothes” during that time. I have a little mending to do on my good clothes because I keep popping the buttons on my shirts, my chest swelling with pride as I watch our children play and sing. Musical household Growing up, we never got Cowboy Logic Ryan Taylor an Atari game system when it came out, and we bought used cars from the classifieds instead of new cars from the showroom floor, but we al- ways had plenty of musical instruments in the house. It was mostly Mom’s doing, I suppose, since she could play most of them. We had an old upright piano, a couple of fid- dles and guitars, a mandolin, a banjo, an old pump organ, a “Hawaiian” lap steel guitar, and as my siblings and I be- gan band in school, they made the investments in a clarinet, a flute and an alto saxophone. I got the alto sax, and played it for seven years. I’m sure most Ataris have hit the landfill, and those used four-door cars have been crushed and recycled, but we still have those musical instru- ments. The alto sax has been put back into service in my son’s fifth-grade band, the pi- ano continues to make music in our house, and I play one of Mom’s old fiddles as I help my other son practice his Suzuki violin lessons. It’s a good thing they last so long. I took a stroll through the music store, and seeing what those instruments cost brand new multiplied my appreci- ation for our music-making contraptions back home. Of course, I’m sure they seemed expensive when Mom and Dad bought them 30 and 40 years ago, too. Since we have the instru- ments, it only seemed right that we support our school’s music program and invest in the pia- no lessons and violin lessons, and drive the miles it takes to get to them when our children began to show an interest in music. I believe there is value in it, even if we don’t become professional musicians. I haven’t played my alto sax a lot since I graduated, but I still can, and I remember how. I only took piano for two years, but I can still play my last recital piece and read mu- sic. Those experiences maybe gave me the courage to teach myself how to play guitar later in life, and pick up Mom’s vi- olin and learn “Twinkle, twin- kle little star,” along with our 8-year-old. A friend of mine shared a TED-Ed video that talked about the brain science of music. Sci- entists say music stimulates more parts of the brain than just about anything else we can do. Listening to music is good, but playing music is exponen- tially more stimulating to the old gray matter between our ears. Something about exercis- ing our corpus callosum and improving our problem-solv- ing ability, memory and execu- tive skills. There’s more to this “Twinkle, twinkle little star” business than meets the eye. Whether it’s listening to our daughter sing with my wife in church, watching our middle son step to the stage and con- fidently play the violin, or see- ing my old saxophone in the hands of our son at a band con- cert, I know it stimulates my brain and pleases my ears, but, most importantly, it warms my heart. Friday, June 12 Friday, June 19 Monday, June 22 Forestry Shortcourse, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. West Bonner Library, Priest River, Idaho, 208-446-1680. This 6-session program will help forest owners understand ecology, silvi- culture, wildlife and other topics. Register by June 5. Forestry Shortcourse, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. West Bonner Library, Priest River, Idaho, 208-446-1680. This 6-session program will help forest owners understand ecology, silvi- culture, wildlife and other topics. Register by June 5. Washington Potato and Onion Association Annual Convention, 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Northern Quest Casi- no, Airway Heights, Wash. Brain science Calendar Wednesday, May 27 Hyslop Farm Field Day, 8: 15 a.m., Oregon State University’s Hyslop Farm, Corvallis, Ore. The Hyslop Farm Field Day includes presentations on winter wheat cultivars, an update on canola and disease management trials, and looks at weed, disease and insect control in Willamette Valley cropping systems. The field day ends with a complimentary lunch served by the OSU Crop and Soil Science Club. Wednesday, June 3 Frozen Assets: How we can and why we should save the world’s frozen water, 7-9 p.m. Walla Walla Public Library, Walla Walla, Wash., 509-943-0705. Mountaineer and climate scientist Steven Ghan takes us on a visual journey along the crest of the North Cascades, showing evidence of glacier retreat shares solutions to prevent global ice melt and how to preserve our snowpack. Wednesday, June 10 Oregon State University Extension Sherman Station Field Day, 7: 30 a.m. Sherman County Extension, Moro, 541-565-3230. Twelve speakers are scheduled to talk on topics that include wheat diseases and screening for re- sistance, soil pH and maximizing yields, soil-borne pathogens and Clearfield wheat trials. Saturday, June 13 Saturday, June 20 Rickreall Gun Show, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Polk County Fair Grounds, Rickreall, Ore., 503-623-3048. Ketchum Kalf Rodeo, 1-9 p.m. Glenwood, Wash. Sheep in the Foothills, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Boise Foothills Learning Center, Boise. Sunday, June 14 Rickreall Gun Show, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Polk County Fair Grounds, Rickreall, Ore., 503-623-3048. Sunday, June 21 Washington Potato and Onion Association Annual Convention, 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Northern Quest Casi- no, Airway Heights, Wash. Ketchum Kalf Rodeo, 1-9 p.m. Glenwood, Wash. Tuesday, June 23 Washington Potato and Onion Association Annual Convention, 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Northern Quest Casi- no, Airway Heights, Wash. Friday, June 26 Forestry Shortcourse, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. West Bonner Library, Priest River, Idaho, 208-446-1680. This 6-session program will help forest owners understand ecology, silvi- culture, wildlife and other topics. Register by June 5. 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. 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. 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