February 26, 2016 CapitalPress.com 7 Senate approves Northwest hard cider makers Oregon increased Tillamook see some good times ahead County wetland scrutiny By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press If industry insiders are cor- rect, hard cider producers in Oregon and Washington are positioned where craft beer PDNHUVDQG¿QHZLQHPDNHUV were before them. That is, facing some hur- dles, but on a roll, collaborat- ing with each other and poised to get bigger and better. Hard cider — the alcoholic cousin of sweet apple cider — ap- pears to be favored by the same people who like a mi- FUREUHZRUERWWOHRI¿QHORFDO wine to go with their good food. They appreciate quality, want to know the producer’s story and are willing to pay more. While the Northeast has much deeper historical roots WR FLGHU PDNLQJ WKH 3DFL¿F Northwest is where the action is, said Ian Merwin, a retired Cornell University apple re- searcher and professor who grows cider apples and makes cider at Black Diamond Farm in New York’s Finger Lakes region. “It’s a very vibrant sector out there,” Merwin said. “One thing about the Northwest scene, it’s a total free-for-all, no rules. There’s a whole lot of people having a lot of fun trying to make cider.” Merwin was among the speakers at “CiderCon,” the U.S. Cider Association’s an- nual convention that was held in Portland in early February. About 1,200 cider makers, apple growers, distributors and others from 44 states and eight countries attended. For now, hard cider is something of a regional suc- cess, and consumption is tiny compared to beer and wine. Merwin estimated people in Oregon, Washington and Cal- ifornia drink 80 percent of the cider consumed in the U.S. Other convention speak- Eric Mortenson/Capital Press Nick Gunn of Wandering Aengus Cider in Salem, Ore., believes EUDQGGLIIHUHQWLDWLRQZLOOEHFRPHNH\DVFRQVXPHUVUH¿QHWKHLU WDVWHIRUKDUGFLGHU ers said cider accounts for 1.7 percent of alcohol sales na- tionally, but about 4 percent in Portland and Seattle. “We are where wine was 30 years ago and the craft beer industry was 20 years ago,” said Nick Gunn, co-founder with his wife, Mimi Casteel, of Wandering Aengus Ciderworks in Sa- lem, Ore. “We’ve had a lot of great growth, but we have a long ways to go.” Gunn and others say hard cider takes some getting used to. Many try it expecting a version of fermented apple juice, and are surprised by the VXEWOHDQGDURPDWLFÀDYRUVRI true cider. “People are unfa- miliar with what they’re tast- ing,” Gunn said. The industry’s biggest hin- drance is a lack of proper ci- der apples. The best apples for cider are sharp, bittersweet, obscure and traced from old English and French varieties, Gunn and others said. E.Z. Orchards, in northeast Salem, was among the indus- try pioneers in making tradi- tional cider from old French varieties. The U.S. is awash in sweet, fresh-eating apples, with Washington the lead- ing producer, but Fuji, Hon- eycrisp, Red Delicious and other familiar varieties don’t make the best cider. Many cider producers make do with them, however, because there CDFA’s Ross: Leafy greens group’s audits comply with federal rules By TIM HEARDEN Capital Press SACRAMENTO — The VWDWH¶V WRS DJULFXOWXUDO RI¿- cial thinks a produce grower group’s rigorous farm-audit process already meets federal Food Safety Modernization Act standards. California Department of Food and Agriculture secre- tary Karen Ross has told par- ticipants in the Leafy Greens Marketing Agreement that their program could be a mod- el as she works to bring about 23,000 farms into compliance with the new federal rules. “I’m very proud of what the industry did by sitting down and partnering with the government,” Ross said in a videotaped interview posted on the LGMA’s website. “I’m sometimes overwhelmed by (growers’) commitment to the rigor of the program.” Established in 2007, the grower-supported LGMA en- lists USDA-accredited state auditors to verify that a set of science-based food safety practices is being followed on leafy greens farms, the orga- nization has explained. On average, each LGMA handler in California is in- spected by government au- GLWRUV ¿YH WLPHV RYHU WKH course of the season, and each audit includes 183 food safe- ty checkpoints focusing on water, soil, animal intrusion and worker hygiene. A simi- lar program exists in Arizona, and together the two states represent 90 percent of the industry. During a public comment period on the Food Safety Modernization Act’s imple- mentation in 2013, LGMA of- ¿FLDOVDUJXHGWKDWWKHLUH[LVW- ing food safety program likely already exceeds the federal requirements and urged the federal government to accept WKHLUDXGLWSURFHVVDVYHUL¿FD- tion of compliance. Representatives from the marketing order have met UHJXODUO\ ZLWK )'$ RI¿FLDOV including hosting farm tours, LGMA spokeswoman April Ward said. is such a shortage of proper cider apples. Some use apple juice concentrate from China, Argentina or elsewhere. Educating consumers is key to the industry’s contin- ued growth, said Merwin, the retired Cornell professor. “All us in the cider realm hope they will evolve in their tastes same way wine drinkers have,” he said. “I started working on cider in the 1990s, when nobody was very interested,” he said. “It’s been fabulous to see it take off.” Meanwhile, the push is on to grow more traditional cider apples. Gunn, of Wandering Aengus, said he considers himself an “apple evangelist” these days as he hunts scion wood for grafting and encour- ages farmers to plant cider varieties. “If I can get them to grow for our company, great,” he said. “But at the very least grow them for the industry.” Gunn said he’s met with a mix of enthusiasm and hesita- tion as farmers consider los- ing a couple years production IURPD¿HOGRUROGRUFKDUGDV new cider varieties take hold and begin to produce. “My selling point is, you’re at the beginning of a trend,” Gunn said. A key advantage is that ci- der varieties can be mechani- cally harvested and used even if they’re bruised, beaten up or fall to the ground, Gunn said. “They don’t have to be coddled,” he said. Gunn and others in the in- dustry say it’s blessed with a cooperative spirit, as growers and cider makers seek each other out, ask questions and offer help. “It’s a very social drink,” Gunn said. “It lends itself to being collaborative. We’ve had that sharing atmosphere from the beginning.” 12-month waiver by Sen. Alan Olsen, who vot- ed in favor of SB 1517 despite wanting “to see this go fur- ther.” Sen. Michael Dembrow, D-Portland, who voted against the bill because the issue is statewide and because the bill GLGQ¶WVXI¿FLHQWO\GH¿QHZKDW By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI it meant for a wetland to sig- Capital Press QL¿FDQWO\ FKDQJH IDUP SUDF- SALEM — A proposal to tices or materially alter the give local governments more stability of agriculture. Wetlands are currently al- control over farm-to-wetland conversions has won the ap- lowed outright in Oregon farm prove of the Oregon Senate, zones, but Senate Bill 1517 although in scaled-back form. ZRXOG¿UVWUHTXLUH7LOODPRRN Under the original lan- County to consider whether guage of Senate Bill 1517, QHZZHWODQGVZLOOVLJQL¿FDQW- Oregon farms could not be ly change local farm practices converted into wetlands un- or disrupt agriculture. Wetland developers could less the local county gov- ernment agrees the change also opt to undergo a “col- wouldn’t disrupt nearby agri- laborative process” with con- cerned stakeholders instead of cultural operations. The scope of the bill has the regular county conditional now been narrowed to a pilot use permit process. The Oregon Farm Bureau project in Tillamook Coun- ty, which needs to preserve supported a change in land farmland for its dairy indus- use rules for wetlands be- try and is a “big center of cause the current approach the most pressing issues” in- doesn’t provide farmers with volving wetland conversions, a “meaningful opportunity” said Mary Anne Nash, public to weigh in on such projects, policy counsel for the Oregon said Nash. Farmers cited numerous Farm Bureau, which supports problems created by wetlands SB 1517. This amended version of during earlier hearings on the SB 1517 was approved 25-3 original version of SB 1517. Wetlands can increase the by the Senate on Feb. 18. The House Committee on Agricul- IUHTXHQF\RIÀRRGLQJDQGLP- ture and Natural Resources pede the drainage of nearby farmland, as well as attract passed it on Feb. 23. However, some lawmakers birds and noxious weeds to have expressed misgivings an area, according to growers about the bill’s reduced scope. who support the proposal. Joe Rocha, who farms While Tillamook Coun- ty certainly needs the pilot near Tillamook Bay, said the program, farmers elsewhere changes in hydrology can kill in Oregon also experience grasses that dairies depend on problems created by wetland for feed. “They brought the saltwa- conversions, said Sen. Doug ter closer to us,” he said. Whitsett, R-Klamath Falls. Kathy Hadley, a farmer in “It’s distressing to know the rest of the state won’t be Oregon’s Willamette Valley, able to protect themselves said a 500-acre wetland bor- IURP EHLQJ ÀRRGHG RXW E\ dering her property increases a rampant neighbor,” he erosion during the wet season and attracts elk that damage said. This concern was echoed fences. 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