14 CapitalPress.com June 3, 2016 Cuteness reigns during tour of dairy farm By GAIL OBERST For the Capital Press Nate Kazemier, 21, son of the owners of Rickreall Dairy, snuggles with a Holstein cow in the maternity barn. Gail Oberst/For the Capital Press Joy Foster, 10, lets a calf suck on her finger during a tour with other children at her grandparents’ Rickreall Dairy. “I grew up doing what you are about to do,” Foster told the group. The oldest of four Thank you dairy producers for the wholesome products you provide consumers every day. Kazemier siblings, Foster and her parents moved 25 years ago to Rickreall, Ore., with her grandfather’s herd from Chino, Calif. When she was old enough, Foster worked in the dairy of- fice, but quit the full-time gig when her three children were born. For the past seven years, she’s been the spring dairy tour leader, thanks to support from the Oregon Dairy and Nutrition Council, formerly known as the Oregon Dairy Products Commission, which pays for her time. The com- mission this year expanded support to allow her to host nearly double the visitors in the spring and in the fall. Last spring, the dairy hosted about 1,500 guests. The tours begin with a warning for city kids: “Every building will have a differ- “Bringing Buyers & Sellers Together” MONDAY SALE AT 12:30 Selling Small Animals, Horses, Pigs, Goats, Sheep, Poultry, then Slaughter cows WEDNESDAY: GENERAL SALE 1:00 PM Dairy Cattle 1st, Calves, Feeder Cattle, then Slaughter Cows Burley, ID 208-878-7224 Next Feeder Sales: June 11th & Aug. 13th @ 12:30 pm Caldwell, ID 208-459-0806 Jerome, ID 208-733-6145 Find us on Facebook WWW.WESTERNSTOCKMENS.COM EQUIPMENT INC. Lynden, WA Your consignments are appreciated! For more information or hauling call: D16-4/#17 Sunnyside, WA 509-836-0267 Barn 360-966-3271 Terry 360-815-4897 • Pete 360-815-0318 www.eversonauctionmarket.com Everson Auction Market 1, L.L.C. 7291 Everson Goshen Rd. • Everson, WA milk them and measure their production. A milker gives a low whistle and the cows move out, making room for the next group. Milking con- tinues all day long, during which each cow is milked three times. The tour is not all seri- ous. Nate Kazemier, Foster’s 21-year-old brother, grabs a swollen cow teet and sprays his sister with milk. On the way to the maternity barns, Audri Evans, 5, of Salem, shyly says she has a joke: “Where do cows go for va- cation? Moo York!” she says. In the maternity barn, Nate delights the children by jump- ing the fence and cuddling with one of the cows lying in the straw. “He thinks he’s a cow,” his sister notes. Teachers and administra- tors who want to take a class- room tour can email Foster at dairytours@hotmail.com. Roger Bajema WE SELL POWDER RIVER GATES, PANELS & FEEDERS. ASK US! Ontario, OR 541-889-6441 ent smell. You’ll get used to it,” Foster said. Further ori- entation included production notes: Each of the 1,700 milk- ing cows average about 10 gallons of milk per day. Most of Rickreall Dairy’s milk goes into Fred Meyer’s gallon jugs via the Farmers Cooperative Creamery. The tour begins in the calf barn — calves weigh just 85 pounds at birth. As adults, they weigh around 1,300 pounds, eating nearly 150 pounds of feed per day, Fos- ter explains. The tags in their ears have computer chips that allow staff to track everything from health to production. The children reach into the pens quietly, and giggle as the calves attempt to suck their fingers. In the milking parlor, children gathered at the far end of a double row of Hol- steins backed up to machin- ery that will automatically D16-1/#24 360-354-4546 Cell 360-815-1383 0% Interest for 36 mos. (Limited time period.) Vermeer Tedders• From 18’ - 52’ Available • All hydraulic • Folds in seconds • New style teeth • Does 40 acres/hr • Goes down the road @ 60 mph Large Selection of Used Hay Equipment D16-4/#24 It would be hard to decide which was cuter: the calves or the children. Luckily, there was no need to choose sides during a re- cent school tour of Rickreall Dairy, the first of the year for tour leader Stacy Foster. Cute- ness reigned among the young of both species. Rickreall Dairy — with nearly 3,500 head one of the largest farms in Oregon — conducts tours for school chil- dren each May and fall. An in- crease in funding for the tours has expanded the tours to Sep- tember through October. The two dozen children who toured the plant this day ranged in age from toddlers to teens, all from Salem-ar- ea home schools. With them were a dozen adults.