4 CapitalPress.com August 26, 2016 Wheat Gary Polson, left, and his sister-in-law, Diane Polson, right, combine wheat on the hilly terrain of the family farm north of Waterville, Wash., on Aug. 18. They are counting on good yields to offset quality and price issues. Dan Wheat/Capital Press WHEAT HARVEST A FAMILY SHOW By DAN WHEAT Capital Press W Dan Wheat/Capital Press Gary Polson, center, with his son, Max, and sister-in-law, Diane, were assisted by three hired hands during wheat harvest. Dan Wheat/Capital Press Two combines cross a fallow ield on way to wheat harvest near Waterville, Wash., on Aug. 18. Chelan Butte in background. quality brings less money and with prices already low, it’s a concern. Polson said he’s heard of one grower docked 25 cents per bushel. Polson hopes to earn at least an adequate return with volume. With good yields they’ll exceed 200,000 bush- els this year. Normally, the Polsons’ yields run 50 to 60 bushels per acre but this year they’re 65 to 68 and as high as 70. “It’s not a bin buster, but for how dry it was last fall (during seeding), we’re total- ly blessed,” he said. Still it’s not a “go forward inancial year.” There won’t be money for extras. The Polson brothers are farming land farmed by their father, Elton, who died eight years ago. Lynn, 63, had irst dibs on farming. Gary did it part-time while he and his wife, Lauren, worked other jobs. They’ve been farming full-time for 19 years and depended on the direct payment federal sub- sidy. It was a little less than 25 percent of his farm income and was based on production. It helped for years that wheat prices were below $4 per bushel. Congress ended the subsi- dies with the 2014 Farm Bill. Polson was ine when pric- es were $7 to $8 per bushel. Now it’s not as good. “Last year we did OK, selling for $6. I didn’t like it then but sure would now. It beats the $4.23 afternoon cash market today in Water- ville,” he said. This year their harvest began Aug. 3 and likely will inish Aug. 27. The brothers and Gary’s son, Max, and hired hand Elijah Weber drive combine. Lynn’s wife, Diane, took his place when he turned to seeding the fallow half of their acreage for next year’s crop. Terry Cox and Bob Olin drive trucks hauling wheat to Central Washington Grain Growers silos in Waterville. The cooperative typically handles 13.5 million bush- els (340,000 metric tons) of wheat grown in Doug- las, Okanogan and parts of Grant and Lincoln counties. It’s mostly soft white winter wheat and 80 to 85 percent of it typically is exported to Asia and the Middle East. PEACH LUGS & 1 1 ⁄ 2 QT. CORRUGATED PEACH BASKETS 503-588-8313 2561 Pringle Rd. SE Salem, OR Call for Pricing. Subject to stock on hand. Delivery Available ROP-34-3-4/#7 Despite challenges, family stays in the field to feed world By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press CONDON, Ore. — It’s a limited pallet this time of year in the Columbia Plateau counties. Blue sky above brown fallow, with com- bines of John Deere green or Case IH red moving in slow, shrinking circuits around golden wheat ields. It’s an empty landscape, most ways you look. Few buildings and no trafic. And in that emptiness, you can lose track of the broader world. The wheat kernels tumbling into the hopper on Chuck Greenield’s combine are the reminder of the connection. From Gilliam County, Ore., with fewer than 2,000 peo- ple, it will go to lour mills in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and the Philippines. “Feed the world,” Green- ield says. It is a diminished group of farmers who can make a liv- ing doing that. Greenield’s employer, Marc Pryor, said the county had about 150 wheat farmers in the 1970s. Now he estimates the num- ber is in the teens. It’s a clas- sic example of the economy of scale: Like most crops, wheat’s narrow proit mar- gin makes it critical to spread input, equipment and labor costs over more acreage, and it forced many farmers to get bigger or get out. In 1950, Oregon had 34,000 farms of one to 49 acres. Now it’s down to 21,800 in that size category. The state lost 8 percent of its farmers between the 2007 Census of Agriculture to the next one in 2012. The weather, crop diseas- es, equipment breakdowns and the market don’t care. Wheat that sold for $7 a bush- el one year brings $5 the next. There may be enough rain to germinate and nourish a dry- land wheat crop through the bone-dry summer, and there may not. “It’s pretty tough right now,” Pryor says. He’s 66 and trying to maintain the farming opera- tion that lourished under his father, Earl Pryor, now re- tired. His stepmother, Laura Pryor, was the Gilliam Coun- ty judge for many years. The family business, now called Prycor LLC, farms about 3,500 acres. Marc Pryor mon- itors the farm from Los Ange- les, where he lives and has a business, and returns home to Condon for harvest. LEGAL 35-1/#7 35-1/#17 ATERVILLE, Wash. — It’s harvest time in the high country. An ocean of golden wheat is being cut and threshed by combines working like ants over miles of the Waterville Plateau. At 2,600 to 2,900 feet above sea level, it’s the high- est wheat region in the state and because of that wheat matures more slowly than neighboring regions to the east. It’s also desert. Farm- ers struggle with inadequate moisture to grow what’s truly dryland wheat. But this year, a little too much rain and temperature luctuations right before har- vest caused a condition re- ferred to as falling numbers. It can involve kernel sprout- ing and damages starch and quality. “I was sitting here fat and happy with all the rain and cool weather knowing the heads were illing but totally unaware of the falling num- bers issue,” said Gary Polson, 56, who farms 6,400 acres of wheat north of Waterville with his brother, Lynn, and his son, Max. Wheat testing lower in Harvest links farmers to lour mills of Asia CHERRY AVENUE STORAGE 2680 Cherry Ave. NE Salem, OR 97301 (503) 399-7454 Sat., Sept. 3rd• 10 A.M. • Unit 4 Bryan VanDyke • Unit 22 Larry Berry • Unit 138/185 Rachel Choudry/John CanaVan • Unit 179 John Codner • Unit 128 Phyllis Perez Cherry Avenue Storage reserves the right to refuse any and all bids legal-34-2-1/#4 Eric Mortenson/Capital Press Wheat pours from the com- bine during the harvest in Ore- gon’s Gilliam County. Marc Pryor is president of an engineering forensics busi- ness, which involves inding out why materials, products, structures or components fail, or don’t work like they should. Farmers have their own structural problems. Some are putting land into conservation reserves and making money that way, Pryor says, but that takes land out of production and limits expansion possibilities. Es- tate taxes can make it dificult to pass farms along to heirs, and in some cases the previ- ous generation still needs to be supported by the farm’s revenue. A strong U.S. dollar can make U.S. wheat more expensive than competitors’, crucial to Paciic Northwest producers whose wheat is ex- ported. But to people who ques- tion the business, Pryor has a ready answer. “Well, we produced over six million pounds of food this year, what have you done? “And it’s in our blood,” Pryor adds. “That’s why we’re still doing it.” Chuck Greenield, the combine driver, talks about the same thing. He turns 72 in September and is the Prycor ield manager. He’s worked for the family 35 years. “You’re kind of indepen- dent, you don’t have to deal with a lot of people,” he says. “If you work in a factory, you’re basically a number.” He glances over, taking his eyes off the machine’s spinning header for a second. “As far as I’m concerned, this is a good way of life,” he says. “It’s not always bad to sit and listen to the combine.” His grandson, Justin Wag- goner, is driving the red Case IH combine. He went school to learn welding, but returned to the wheat ields. “I didn’t ask him to come back,” Greenield says. “He’s got farming in his blood.” Greenield and his grand- son circle in to the trucks to unload. Truck driver Buster Nation, who says he’s “16 running on 17,” manipulates an auger transferring wheat from a smaller truck to a larg- er one, which will haul the load to a grain elevator. LEGAL PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87 Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 8/29/2016. The sale will be held at 10:00 am by TRS OREGON INC 1887 ANUNSEN ST NE SALEM, OR 2015 Coachman Trailer VIN - 5ZT3CH1B1FA310517 Amount due on lien $7,874.37 Reputed owner(s) SEAN & HEIDI HALVERSON USAA FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK legal-34-2-4/#4