November 13, 2015 CapitalPress.com 15 S. Idaho farmers experiment with cover crops By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press BURLEY, Idaho — Trying their hand at growing cover crops and no-till farming, pro- ducers in southcentral Idaho list a host of objectives — from improving soil health to improving their bottom line. Some of their practices are reaping benefits, others hold promise and yet others need work, the growers told par- ticipants in a cover crop tour hosted by the Minidoka, East Cassia and West Cassia Soil and Water Conservation dis- tricts on Nov. 4. Regardless of the level of initial success, the growers agreed experimenting in their fields is worth the effort, say- ing cover crops and no-till will become increasingly im- portant in agriculture. Justin Hunter, who serves on the board of the Minido- ka conservation district and farms near Hazelton, said he had thrown out purple top turnip seed before but growth was spotty. This is the first year he’s really trying a cov- er crop, planting a six-way blend of clover, peas, oats, cabbage, turnips, and radish on 67 acres. “I feel there’s going to be a lot of good come from this,” he said. He’s looking for better wa- ter-holding capacity in the soil to lower crop stress between irrigations, as well as better protection from the wind for both the soil and young sugar beet plants. Additionally, Hunter hopes to improve soil health, increase organic matter, re- duce tillage, reduce fertilizer inputs, have a manageable residue, and create forage in- come, he said. Organic material from the broadcasted turnip seed crop he tried last year helped with wind stress this year. He’s us- ing a no-till drill to plant this year’s mix helped to achieve a better, more uniformed stand — although the peas were a little thin and the clover was either planted too light or shaded by other plants, he said. The seed cost him $35 an acre. The cover crop will be grazed by sheep and disked this fall then the field will be sown to sugar beets in the spring, he said. A little further east, Schaeffer Farms manager Bri- Schaeffer Farms manager Brian Kossman, (in the beanie), board member of the Minidoka Soil and Water Conservation District, talks to participants in a crop cover tour hosted by the Minidoka, East Cassia and West Cassia Soil and Water Conservation districts near Paul, Idaho, on Nov. 4. Photos by Carol Ryan Dumas/Capital Press NRCS soil conservationist Dinah Reaney and Justin Hunter, Minidoka Soil and Water Conservation District board member, examine plant roots in a field near Hazelton, Idaho, where Hunter is experi- menting with cover crops. The stop was part of a cover crop tour hosted by the Minidoka, East Cassia and West Cassia Soil and Water Conservation districts on Nov. 4. an Kossman has a 115-acre experimental field dedicated to trying out no-till practices and cover cropping. He’s had hits and misses with no-till drilling into resi- due but sees value and oppor- tunity in the cropping system, he said. This year, he blew on a four-way cover crop mix of oats, peas, radish, and clover ($21 an acre) into malt bar- ley stubble and harrowed it in. There was an issue with volunteer grain and the pea seed didn’t get the moisture it needed to germinate, but the crop did well overall. In the future, he’ll spray the volun- teer grain and drill the seed, he said. Sheep will graze the field this fall, and it will be planted to silage corn in the spring, he said. Direct seeding sugar beets into residue produced a great crop this year, higher yield and sugar than average. But he doesn’t know if that can be repeated. Corn and malt bar- ley direct seeded have been equal in yield and quality to conventional crops, he said. Moving forward The experimental prac- tices have never been about trying to see if the farm can get better crops than conven- tional agricultural, it’s about seeing if the system is pos- sible in the operation, Koss- man said. Farmers have been direct seeding corn and soybeans in the Midwest for decades. The challenge here is in raising different crops, particularly sugar beets and potatoes, he said. There’s also a mentality issue — veering from what worked for Dad and loving the look of a plowed field fence row to fence row with no weeds, he said. “All of us, three or four years ago wouldn’t have done this. And I don’t want to be cavalier; we’ve had our wrecks,” he said. But he’s seen distinct advantages as well. Water runoff has always been a problem in the hill area. The farm operators thought they noticed a decrease in run-off following the first cover crop but after the next cover crop, it was clear; there was no run-off, he said. Considering the invest- ments in irrigation water, pivots and pumping, water is money, he said. “If you get it to stay where Farmers Ending Hunger unveils exhibit By GEORGE PLAVEN EO Media Group BOARDMAN, Ore. — By the time 2015 draws to a close, Farmers Ending Hunger ex- pects to donate nearly 4 mil- lion pounds of fresh, locally grown food to the Oregon Food Bank for the year. That’s a single-year record and about 1.5 million pounds more than the organization managed in 2014, but Exec- utive Director John Burt said they can still do more. “There’s a big hunger issue in this state,” Burt said. “We need people to get involved.” A crowd of 85 people gath- ered Nov. 7 at the SAGE Cen- ter in Boardman to celebrate Farmers Ending Hunger, in- cluding Portland Mayor Char- lie Hales and Oregon Food Bank CEO Susannah Morgan. The event also doubled as an unveiling for the new Farmers Ending Hunger exhibit at the SAGE Center — Boardman’s visitor’s center and regional ag- ricultural museum. Fred Ziari, president and CEO of IRZ Consulting in Hermiston, founded the non- profit Farmers Ending Hunger in 2004 after learning Oregon was, at the time, the nation’s hungriest state. Today, 1-in-5 Oregonians faces food insecurity. Ziari said he hopes the museum dis- play will continue to galvanize Eastern Oregon farmers to help feed their neighbors. “Just knowing this was hap- pening in our own state was a shock to me,” Ziari said. “This display will educate permanent- ly for hundreds of thousands of people coming through here.” Farmers Ending Hunger represents a collaborative effort between more than 100 farm- ers, food processors and the it’s supposed to be, that’s a pretty big deal,” he said. Leaving the crop residue and not working the soil im- proved the soil’s water-hold- ing capacity. Direct-seeded malt barley into corn stubble this year got up without wa- ter, so the crop had one less irrigation, he said. “Organic matter numbers haven’t changed yet, but we think they will,” he said. Farmers in the Midwest say it takes three or four years, but the soil structure is starting to change, plating rather than clumping, he said. “The whole system is be- coming better,” he said. Another thing to consider is the savings in tractor pass- es, he said. “We’re always doing things to make a perfect seed bed. Everything grows in this (crop residue). Can we take out money in groundwork and help out margins that way?” he posed. Custom tractor work costs $140 per acre. A farmer could save three or four trac- tor passes in corn and sugar beets by direct seeding into residue, he said. Mark Hobsen, who farms southwest of Burley and runs 25 cow-calf pairs, has put in Associated Press George Plaven/EO Media Group Oregon Food Bank to deliver much-needed meals to families. On average, about 284,000 res- idents rely on emergency food boxes for meals. Of those, 34 percent are children. Ziari said the organization was born not out of charity, but a labor of love. He recognized Amstad Produce for contrib- uting 30 tons of potatoes per month; Hale Farms for con- tributing 25 tons of onions per month; and Threemile Canyon Farms for contributing 25-30 beef cows per month. Enough wheat has also been donated for roughly 5 million pancakes, Ziari said. Much of that food ends up on the west side of the state, and Portland Mayor Hales said he wanted to thank those growers in person for their generosity. Seventeen percent of Mult- nomah County’s population is food insecure, Hales said, or about 116,000 people. “You are right on the fore- front of an issue that profound- ly affects the people I work for,” Hales said. “I so value the substance and the spirit of what you’re doing.” Morgan, who has served as CEO of the Oregon Food Bank since 2012, emphasized hunger remains a big challenge in the state. However, the problem isn’t that there’s not enough food, she said, but a matter of gathering and distributing do- nations to the hungry. The Oregon Food Bank stands ready to partner with Farmers Ending Hunger into the future, Morgan said. “We will not rest until we’ve eliminated hunger,” she said. The event ended with a $10,000 donation to Farmers Ending Hunger from North- west Farm Credit Services. Non-farmers can also donate the organization’s “Adopt an Acre” program. Kenzie Hansell, a fourth-generation farmer with Hansell Farms, said that with everybody doing their part, they can continue to build on their success. “As farmers, we have a re- sponsibility to be stewards of the land,” Hansell said. “As hu- mans, we have a responsibility to take care of one another.” To learn more about Farm- ers Ending Hunger or to make a donation, visit www.farm- ersendinghunger.com. Fueling change John Firth, chairman of the Minidoka conservation district, said experimentation with cover crops and no-till farming in the local districts is being fueled by progres- sive farmers and assisted by a matching grant from National Resources Conservation Ser- vice. Last year, the three area conservation districts were jointly awarded a Conserva- tion Innovation Grant for a project to educate landown- ers on the use of direct seed farming and cover crops and provide cover crop seed and access to equipment, he said. Total funding for the proj- ect was nearly $146,000, allowing the districts to pur- chase two no-till drills to rent to producers interested in no- till farming. Since the drills arrived in April, about 25 farmers within the Mini-Cas- sia area have used them to seed about 2,000 experimen- tal acres, he said. Assistance is also available to offset costs for cover crops and companion practices through NCRS’s Soil Health Initiative established through Environmental Quality Incen- tive Programs (EQIP), said NRCS Soil Conservationist Dinah Reaney. In addition, new agrono- mists are coming on board at NRCS to assist producers in implementing no- till farming practices, she said. David Mabey, the new NRCS district conservation- ist for the Burley and Rupert field offices, said he is im- pressed with what’s going on in the area and the proactive district boards. This is how farming is go- ing to be sustainable and prof- itable in the future, he said. Sheepherders protest Dept. of Labor wage plan as inadequate By BEN NEARY John Burt, left, and Fred Ziari unveiled the new Farmers Ending Hunger exhibit Nov. 7 at the SAGE Center. cover crops on three fields for three years and said results have varied but he’s gaining experience. The first year, he planted too late and the seed didn’t get enough time for the crop to take off. Last year, he disk planted earlier and watered, which worked well, giving him about 2 tons of forage per acre. When he turned cows into the cover crop, “it was like they were going into a super- market. They were very hap- py,” he said. He didn’t have to feed hay until after Christmas and esti- mates the feed conversion of the cover crops amounted to about nine tons of hay. This year he used a no- till drill to plant a six-way mix of peas, oats, corn, hairy and common vetch, and rad- ish and ended up with vol- unteer barley and cutworm problems. He plans to direct seed beans or sugar beets into the cover crop fields in the spring. Even though an earlier trial of direct seeded beets didn’t yield as well as conventionally grown beets, he did save a lot of time and money, he said. Aside from providing ad- ditional forage, planting cov- er crops does so many good things for the ground, he said. It improves water infiltra- tion, breaks up compaction, reduces nematodes, decreas- es erosion, and increases or- ganic matter, he said. “I just think it’s a real good thing to do,” he said. CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — Some current and former sheepherders say the U.S. De- partment of Labor has folded to pressure from the American sheep industry by trimming its proposal to require raises for thousands of foreign shep- herds in the West. The federal government for decades has endorsed a program that allows sheep ranchers to bring in foreign shepherds to oversee their herds on the grounds that U.S. citizens wouldn’t take the jobs. They are called “H2-A” workers after the program that allows them into the country. Over 2,000 H2-A work- ers a year participate in the program. For years, feder- al regulations have set their wages in Wyoming and most other Western states at $750 a month. The workers com- monly work around the clock, living in tents or trailers far from towns, while ranchers cover their living and travel expenses. In response to a lawsuit from some shepherds, the U.S. Department of Justice early this year proposed re- quiring raises for shepherds to $2,400 a month by 2020. Sheep industry officials and politicians around the West, including Republican Wyo- ming Gov. Matt Mead, pro- tested the proposal, saying it would put many operators out of business. The Labor Department re- cently released its final rule, calling for increasing shep- herd pay up to the federal minimum wage, currently $7.25 an hour for a 48-hour week — over $1,500 a month — over the next few years. Egan Reich, spokesman for the department in Wash- ington, D.C., recently de- clined comment on the rule, saying the agency couldn’t comment until it goes into ef- fect later this month. The Hispanic Affairs Project, based in Montrose, Colorado, last week filed an amended complaint in its pending lawsuit in U.S. Dis- trict Court in Washington, D.C. challenging the Labor Department rule. The group, together with two individu- al shepherds, asserts that the new federal rule is improper because it would set the wage rate for H2-A shepherds be- low the pay rate below the $10 to $13 an hour it states other migrant agricultural workers are paid. “This increase is good, but it’s not enough,” Ricardo Pe- rez, executive director of the Hispanic Affairs Project, said Monday. “We are very disappointed that still the new regulation is not fair, especially when we know that the workers are not only working 48 hours a week, most of the time they are on call 24 hours, they are working 7 days a week,” Pe- rez said. Alex McBean, a staff at- torney in the Farm Worker Unit at Utah Legal Services, has represented sheepherders in challenging their working conditions and pay. “For sheepherders, it’s not as favorable as the proposed rule. But it’s definitely an im- provement on what they had before,’ McBean said. “A lot of sheepherders I’ve spoken to are excited for the pay in- crease.” McBean noted the rule spells out what sort of work shepherds who come to the country on H2A visas may perform. “It does allow for some work at the ranch, but it most- ly makes it so that they have to keep to the range, and do- ing that job that really does require them to be on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week,” McBean said. “A lot of ranchers have used H2A workers just to do whatever they needed and haven’t re- ally been very conscientious about keeping them in the role of a sheep herder.” Jim Magagna, executive vice president of the Wyo- ming Stock Growers Associa- tion, said he would commend the Department of Labor for making significant changes to the proposed rule the agency released early this year in re- sponse to public comment. “That previous draft, had that been enacted in the form it was presented, would have forced countless people I be- lieve out of the sheep indus- try,” Magagna said. “The current rule, while there may be some challeng- es, I think is in general work- able,” Magagna said. “There are always questions with a new rule in general on how it will be implemented, but the unworkable parts of the draft rule were amended. It does still include a significant in- crease in the wages for sheep- herders.”