December 9, 2016 CapitalPress.com 9 Washington Battle lines are drawn in Washington over new wells Environmentalists defend ruling By DON JENKINS Capital Press Courtesy of Phillip Gross/Warden Hutterian Brethren Farms Members of the Warden Hutterian Brethren harvest their wheat in July near Warden, Wash. Farmer Phillip Gross won the National Association of Wheat Growers’ yield contest with a yield of 192.85 bushels per acre. Washington farmer wins national wheat yield contest By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press Phillip Gross knew he had a pretty good yield this year. But he wasn’t expecting to win the National Association of Wheat Growers yield con- test. “I definitely thought there would be some other growers knocking on the door of 200 bushels,” Gross said. Gross topped the award with 192.85 bushels per acre for irrigated wheat, 216 per- cent above the county aver- age, according to NAWG. Gross planted WestBred Keldin, a hard red winter wheat variety he’s raised for several years. Gross said that’s an unusual yield. He credited a significant boost provided by cooler flowering weather than normal. “This is the biggest yield we’ve had on record,” he said. One entire field averaged 192 bushels. Gross suspects some parts of that field had even higher yields, but didn’t have it staked out or tested for yields. Gross farms with the War- den Hutterian Brethren Farms near Warden, Wash. The com- munity raises about 9,000 acres of irrigated wheat and 2,000 acres of dryland wheat. “A lot of our yields are de- pendent upon water availabil- ity,” he said. When the weather is warm, wheat takes a backseat to such crops as potatoes, peas or corn, Gross said. “Wheat is a lot more flex- ible in that way— it allows you to use water elsewhere, and when you have some available later on, move it back again,” he said. The majority of the farm’s acres are irrigated by the Odessa Subarea aquifer, which is declining. The farm is planning to install a pump- ing station south of its home base to replace aquifer water with water from the Columbia River. “It definitely needs to hap- pen,” Gross said. “It’s unsus- tainable, pulling the amount of water from the aquifer and expecting it to be there year after year.” With river water, Gross ex- pects to be able to draw bigger yields with better water that’s not so high in sodium, Falling number tests af- fected some of the soft white wheat varieties the communi- ty grew, with results dropping to roughly 230. Farmers are docked at el- evators for wheat below 300. Some hard red winter wheat escaped unscathed, he said. Stripe rust also affected some “gold standard” variet- ies that never had the problem before, Gross said. “So the rust strains are mu- tating,” he said. The price received varied throughout the farm, Gross said. OLYMPIA — The Wash- ington Supreme Court’s rul- ing in Whatcom County vs. Hirst could shut down rural homebuilding statewide, a lobbyist for farm groups and other water users said Thurs- day at a House hearing. “The more I listen to people discuss the Hirst case, the more convinced I am that there will be no growth in the rural area un- less we solve the problem,” said Kathleen Collins of the Washington Water Policy Alliance, whose members include irrigators, business- es and cities. The House Agriculture and Local Government com- mittees held a joint hearing to learn more about the Oc- tober decision, in which the court ruled that new domes- tic wells can’t impair existing water rights, including river flows. Previously, domestic wells, which account for 1 percent of water use, were exempt from such review. Many bills related to the ruling are likely to be intro- duced during the 2017 session. Some groups, including the Washington Farm Bureau, hope lawmakers will blunt the decision. Although the ruling does not threaten to curtail irrigation water rights, the Farm Bureau condemned the decision for effectively pro- Courtesy of TVW Washington Water Policy Alliance lobbyist Kathleen Collins testifies Dec. 1 at a joint hearing of the House Agriculture and Local Gov- ernment committees in Olympia. She warned that a recent state Supreme Court decision threatens to shut down homebuilding in rural areas. The Washington Farm Bureau condemns the ruling for barring farm families from drilling new domestic wells. hibiting new homes for farm families. Environmental groups sig- naled Wednesday they will defend the thrust of the ruling. The groups are influential in the House, where Democrats hold a majority of seats. “Obviously, we have to get agreement with the envi- ronmental side. I hope that’s possible,” Collins said after the hearing. In the Hirst case, the envi- ronmental group Futurewise and others challenged What- com County and the state Department of Ecology. Both agencies said new wells in the county would not harm water resources. The court, however, ruled that small withdrawals of groundwater add up and de- prive rivers of water for fish, wildlife and scenery. The ruling means prospec- tive homeowners may have to finance expensive studies to prove their wells won’t harm existing water rights. In some watersheds, water rights in- clude minimum river flows set in previous decades by Ecology. Critics say the flow standards are too high and create an artificial scarcity of water. Proving a new well won’t intercept or draw water from a river may range from hard to impossible. Hydrologists say that groundwater and surface waters are connected. “Water withdrawn from groundwater does impact sur- face water and therefore se- nior water rights,” U.S. Geo- logical Service hydrologist Matt Bachmann told House members. “That impact is common- ly too small to measure for a small domestic well, but it is not too small to measure cu- mulatively if you look at all domestic wells in a basin,” he said. SugarBee apples head to stores By DAN WHEAT Capital Press CHELAN, Wash. — Sugar- Bee, a new apple variety said to be sweeter than Honeycrisp, will be sold commercially for the first time this month. Chelan Fresh Marketing is providing test marketing of first-year production to sever- al Wal-Mart stores across the nation, Safeway in Northern California, Kroger and Whole Foods, said Mac Riggan, vice president of marketing at Chel- an Fresh. About 8,000, 40-pound boxes of SugarBee is being sold in holiday packaging, and the goal is to eventually sell whatever the market bears at a good profit, Riggan said. “We’ve had head-to-head taste tests with Honeycrisp Courtesy of Chelan Fresh Marketing The new apple, SugarBee, is hitting selected markets in limited supply for the first time this month in holiday packag- ing. Chelan growers see it as a future money maker. and it’s beaten it hands down. Honeycrisp has a tendency to go flat, lose its flavor in storage. SugarBee doesn’t do that,” said Harold Schell, director of field services of Chelan Fruit Cooperative. The co-op and Gebbers Farms, of Brewster, acquired the exclusive rights to grow and sell the new apple from Regal Fruit International, a variety management affiliate of Willow Drive Nursery in Ephrata. Regal obtained propa- gation rights from the pat- ent-holder, apple breeder Chuck Nystrom, of Worthing- ton, Minn., who discovered the variety in the early 1990s from his experimental seed plantings. The mother seed is Honey- crisp and the father is an un- known pollinator likely carried by a honeybee, Schell said. The resulting apple is mostly red but also yel- low-skinned and is high in sugar content — hence the name SugarBee chosen by an advertising agency for Chel- an Fresh. Bag needs? Bag solutions! SMITH PACKAGING YOUR MAIN SUPPLIER FOR: • Polyethylene Bags • Polypropylene Bags • Paper Bags • Bulk Bags • Stretch Films • Hay Sleeves • Mesh Produce Bags • Plastic Pallet Covers • Bag Closure Products • General Warehouse Supplies Competitive pricing! Great quality products! Service you expect and trust! • Halsey, Oregon: 541-369-2850 • Eastern Washington, Ed Kropf: 509-936-2652 or ed@smith-packaging.com www.smithpackagingservices.com 50-2/#5 50-1/#7