16 CapitalPress.com December 25, 2015 Dairy will relocate to Boardman tree farm Sale completed in November By GEORGE PLAVEN EO Media Group Nearly one-third of the massive Boardman Tree Farm has been sold to a local dairy that plans to move operations within the next year. Willow Creek Dairy pur- chased 7,288 acres of the tree farm from GreenWood Re- sources in November. Owner Greg te Velde said the land he purchased runs along the property’s southern boundary — out of view from Inter- state 84 — near Finley Buttes Landfill. Once trees have been re- moved from the property, te Velde said he will put in a center pivot to grow irrigated wheat, corn and alfalfa. His dairy currently raises about 8,000 cows and provides 70,000 gallons of milk per day to Tillamook Cheese at the Port of Morrow. Te Velde lives in central California, and established Willow Creek Dairy in 2002 on land leased from Threemile Canyon Farms. The operation employs about 50 people. “The whole community is great,” te Velde said. “It’s all about agriculture. It’s really easy to do business here.” Te Velde purchased land, water rights and irrigation EO Media Group file photo Nearly one-third of the 25,000-acre Boardman Tree Farm is being sold to the Willow Creek Dairy. equipment from the Board- man Tree Farm for $65 mil- lion, according to documents at the Morrow County As- sessor’s Office. GreenWood Resources has owned the Boardman Tree Farm since 2007, totaling 25,000 acres of hybrid poplar trees that are grown in rotation and sold for sawlogs, pulp and biofuel. It takes 12 years before the trees fully mature. Te Velde said he expects a measured transition from tree farm to dairy farm on the new- ly acquired land. GreenWood Resources did retain some options in the deal, depending on market conditions. With any luck, te Velde said he could be moved within the next year. “We’ll have a little more control over our destiny,” he said. Don Rice, director of North American operations for GreenWood Resources, did not comment on the long-term future of the tree farm. The area spans six miles along In- terstate 84 and 13 miles to the south, and stands as a signifi- cant landmark for the region. The tree farm includes roughly 6 million standing trees, and provides lumber to the Collins Companies’ Upper Columbia Mill, which oper- ates in conjunction with the GreenWood Tree Farm Fund. There is also a veneer mill owned by Columbia Forest Products that opened in 2013. The Tree Farm also has hosted “A Very Poplar Run” since 2011, with 5K and 10K races to benefit the Agape House in Hermiston. E. Oregon farms step up organic acres By GEORGE PLAVEN EO Media Group Kathy Aney/EO Media Group Bins of fresh, organic peppers beckon shoppers at the Safeway store in Pendleton, Ore. Organic groups welcome more research funding By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press Groups representing or- ganic growers are pleased with USDA’s announce- ment of $17.6 million in funding to support organic research but say the bur- geoning industry needs much more. USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack said the available funding, through grants from the Organic Agricul- ture Research and Exten- sion Initiative, is part of USDA’s efforts to support organic producers as they respond to increasing con- sumer demand for organic products. “We think it’s just ter- rific, but it’s just part of what we need to scale up organic production to meet the tremendous demand,” said Cathy Calfo, execu- tive director of California Certified Organic Farmers (CCOF). “Demand is sky high; we need more of this,” she said. Consumer demand for organic has really emerged in the last decade, and U.S. production is just catching up. The fact that USDA is taking note is “very posi- tive,” she said. But more investment is needed for organic re- search, which has only received a small portion of USDA’s $1.1 billion re- search budget for 2015, unrepresentative of the 5 percent of U.S. food sales claimed by organic, she said. “For us, any part of that is significant. In the over- all budget, it’s a very small part, less than a couple per- cent,” she said. With organic imports increasing, it’s important to invest in U.S. organic now to be able to turn that around in the future, she said. The Organic Trade As- sociation agrees, stating it is pleased with USDA’s announcement but organic research is still woefully underfunded. “More organic research is critically needed to help organic agriculture grow in this country, and to give producers and all organic stakeholders more resources to help them make the best business decisions,” OTA said in a written statement to the Capital Press. “We appreciate USDA Secretary Vilsack’s pledge to foster organic production in the U.S., but more needs to be done. We will contin- ue to advocate for more or- ganic research funding and policies to increase those research dollars,” OTA stat- ed. In that regard, the orga- nization petitioned USDA this past spring for an or- ganic check-off research and promotion program. CCOF has also been en- gaged in organic research efforts, meeting with the dean of the University of California-Davis College of Agriculture and Environ- mental Sciences earlier this year, asking her to devote more research to organic production, Calfo said. Organic growers are re- questing research that ad- dresses plant production, pests and soil health. There needs to be more tools to improve organic farming, and research is an important tool, she said. Jennifer Miller, food and farm programs director at the Northwest Center for Alternatives to Pesticides, said USDA has provided important support for or- ganic farming through sev- eral programs, initiatives and projects. The center is also pleased to see continued emphasis on plant breeding for organ- ic systems, she said. Farmers rely on preven- tative practices for man- aging pests on organic farms, and seeds developed under organic conditions are better able to com- pete with weeds and re- sist pests and diseases, she said. “Consumer demand for organic foods continues to show strong growth, so even greater investment is needed to help U.S. farm- ers meet this market oppor- tunity,” she said. The purpose of the or- ganic research and exten- sion program is to fund high-priority research, education and extension projects that enhance the ability of producers and processors who have al- ready adopted organic standards to grow and mar- ket high-quality organic products. Project applications for the latest round of fund- ing are due March 10. For more information, visit www.nifa.usda.gov. Eric Nelson knew it wouldn’t be easy when he decided to go organic on his family’s 900- acre wheat farm north of Pendle- ton. Nelson, a fourth-gener- ation farmer, talked it over Eric Nelson with his father — former state Sen. David Nel- son — who wondered how they would control weeds without herbicide, or how they’d afford organic fertilizer and still turn a profit. But Nelson had faith it would work, and in 2008 Nel- son Grade Organics harvested its first organic crop. “I’m very comfortable with what we have done, what we’re doing and where we’re going,” Nelson said. “For me, I see no need to go back.” Overall, the number of or- ganic farms has declined in Or- egon between 2007 and 2012, yet total organic acres nearly quadrupled over that time, ac- cording to the National Agri- cultural Statistics Service. Organic sales also rose from $88 million to $194 million in Oregon, making up 4 percent of all farms sales statewide. Nationally, the organic food in- dustry made $39 billion in 2015 — an 11 percent increase over the previous year. Despite the demand, be- coming an organic farm takes serious time and money. Fields cannot be sprayed with any prohibited chemicals for at least three years before they are cer- tified organic. Without certifi- cation, products won’t fetch the same kind of premium price at the market, which can be dou- ble or more, depending on the commodity. Nelson said he had help from the U.S. Department of Agriculture getting started, but even that didn’t help pay all the bills. Organic fertilizer costs up to twice as much as the con- ventional stuff, and managing weeds can become a real issue without being able to use her- bicides. To make it over the hump, Nelson said he had to get cre- ative with his cropping systems. He uses spring grains such as mustard and barley to break up soil-borne diseases and replen- ish nutrients underground. “We basically have to create our own nitrogen,” he said. Wheat is still the big mon- ey-maker on the farm, but Nel- son recently started selling or- Kathy Aney/EO Media Group Produce manager Aaron Mitchell places stickers on apples Monday at the Pendleton, Ore., Safeway store, identifying them as organic. ganic mustard seed to Barhyte Specialty Foods in Pendleton, Ore., as an additional source of revenue. “Some years are tough, but we have made a profit. We’re still surviving,” he said. A portion Nelson’s wheat goes to Hummingbird Whole- sale, a company in Eugene, Ore., that distributes dry organ- ic goods to small independent grocery stores, restaurants and food processors. General Manager Justin Freeman said most of the prod- ucts they buy come from West- ern Oregon, but there is a grow- ing interest among Eastern Oregon farmers in going organ- ic. The key hurdle, he said, is supporting growers during that three-year transitional phase in certification. “It’s about finding solutions for people and getting risk out of the equation as much as pos- sible,” Freeman said. In the past, Hummingbird Wholesale has purchased rice, beans and cranberries at premi- um organic prices from farmers who have started the process of certification. The goal is to win over more organic farms to keep up with demand, Freeman said. A similar initiative for wheat has also been launched by Ar- dent Mills, of Denver, which hopes to double U.S. organic wheat acres by 2019. Oregon Tilth, a nonprofit organization that helps certify local organic farms, has also signed on as a partner. Chris Schreiner, executive director of Oregon Tilth, said the growing demand for or- ganic products is being driven in part by a renewed interest in food and earth-friendly farming practices. From a grower standpoint, Schreiner said there is a tre- mendous opportunity for go- ing organic, but recognizes it comes with risks. “Their challenge is figuring out a new management system and accessing those new mar- kets,” Schreiner said. “We’re committed to supporting them and helping them seize that op- portunity in the marketplace.” One of Eastern Oregon’s largest irrigated organic grow- ers, Threemile Canyon Farms in Boardman, now has 7,800 acres in certified organic vege- tables. General Manager Marty Myers said he hopes to grow that total to 12,000 acres over the next two years. Threemile Canyon grows organic sweet peas, sweet corn, onions, carrots, potatoes and edamame, which are mostly sent to the farm’s frozen foods plant in Pasco. Frozen products are sold primarily to Costco un- der the brand name Organic by Nature. The farm also developed its first organic dairy earlier this year just east of Hermiston, with about 1,300 cows. Part of the requirement for an organ- ic dairy is to let cows graze in pasture for at least 120 days of the year. Myers said Threemile Can- yon first dipped its toes in or- ganic farming in 2002, using fertilizer generated from the farm’s dairies. Without that in- house fertilizer source, Myers said they likely couldn’t make the organic operation work. Organic vegetables yield about 75 percent versus con- ventional methods, though My- ers said premium prices make up for the hit. Growing organic means going back in time about 20 year in terms of production practices, he said. Sometimes, the only way to manage weeds is to pull them by hand. “There are a lot of farmers who have tried it and didn’t like it, for obvious reasons,” Myers said. “We feel we can be a low- cost producer. That gives us an advantage over a lot of other producers.” On a much smaller scale, Gus Wahner grows organic produce on about one-third of an acre in Stanfield, including tomatoes, basil, cucumber and garlic. Wahner has been farming on and off for 30 years at his home, which he’s named Way of Life Farms. Though not cer- tified organic, he said the land hasn’t been sprayed since 1970. He raises produce from the greenhouse to the hoop house, and made $15,000 in profit last year. Wahner, who serves on the Umatilla County Soil and Wa- ter Conservation District, is a longtime advocate of organic farming. He uses an aerobic system to brew his own com- post “tea,” which he sprays along with a mixture of fish, kelp, molasses and sea minerals to create healthy, organic soils. “When people talk about or- ganic, it needs to be biological,” he said. “The whole essence of organic is improvement in the soil.” Wahner said he’s not an environmentalist, but growing organic requires being in tune with nature. Spraying chem- icals kills off components in the ground, he said, but organic farming is about working with nature to grow what you need. The food is also healthier, he said, because it absorbs a great- er host micro-nutrients from the ground. “I don’t do farming to make money, necessarily. I do it for people to experience great food and be healthy,” Wahner said. Ten years after switching to organic, Nelson said they con- tinue to make a living while preserving the legacy of their land. Apple commission seeks State commission redesigns website voting method change By DAN WHEAT Capital Press WENATCHEE, Wash. — The Washington Apple Com- mission wants to modify how growers vote on major policies such as changing the assess- ments that fund it. By state law, each grower gets one vote, but also gets one vote per acre, said Todd Fry- hover, commission president. It takes 60 percent of votes by grower, plus 60 percent of votes by acreage to pass propos- als such as changing the 3.5-cent per box assessment that funds the commission, he said. The commission is not con- templating changing the assess- ment and plans to keep one vote per grower but believes the oth- er part of voting should be based on the number of boxes packed instead of acreage, Fryhover said. More fruit is grown per acre with newer, high-density plant- ings than is grown with older plantings of larger trees, he said. Therefore, it’s more equitable to base the vote on boxes packed, he said. It also is easier to track boxes packed through packing compa- nies than to track acreage from growers, he said. At a Dec. 10 commission meeting, commissioners agreed to seek that change through the state Legislature, he said. WENATCHEE, Wash. — The Washington Apple Com- mission has launched a redesigned website, www.bestap- ples.com, aimed at reaching millions of overseas consumers who rely on smart phones for information. The site uses the tagline “The State for Apples,” in En- glish, and uses responsive design for optimized viewing on screens of all sizes. “The goal is to make the content appealing and infor- mative for our fans in the U.S. and foreign markets,” said Rebecca Lyons, the commission’s international marketing director. Content is available in eight languages targeting con- sumers in Latin America, China, Taiwan, Indonesia, Thai- land, Vietnam and the Middle East. The project was partially funded by a specialty crop grant through the state Department of Agriculture. About one-third of Washington’s apple crop is usually exported to more than 60 countries. The commission is a grower-funded organization that promotes Washington ap- ples in international markets. — Dan Wheat