October 27, 2017 CapitalPress.com 5 East Idaho young farmers pool knowledge through group texts By JOHN O’CONNELL Capital Press SODA SPRINGS, Ida- ho — When Dan Lakey is stumped about how to handle a problem in one of his fields, he sends a group text message to several other young farm- ers in the area. For example, there were the mysterious caterpillars he discovered last June feed- ing on Canadian thistles. In response to a picture he sent with his text, another young farmer, Eli Hubbard, iden- tified them as painted lady caterpillars, informing Lakey they were beneficial and would eat only weeds. Lakey and about six others who participate in the group texts reason the next genera- tion of farmers faces a great challenge in adapting their operations to new technol- ogy and the latest trends in improving farm sustainabili- ty. So for the past few years, John O’Connell/Capital Press Dan Lakey, of Soda Springs, Idaho, gives a demonstration about soil health, and how the use of no-till farming and cover crops can reduce water erosion, during a forum hosted at his friend Cody Cole’s farm last summer. Lakey and Cole are members of an informal group of young farmers who provide each other guid- ance — especially on soil-health matters — by sending group text messages or visiting each other’s fields. they’ve been working togeth- er and pooling their knowl- edge to find an advantage. “We share articles or vid- eos or things we see in our fields,” said group member Jake Ozburn. They also meet regularly for breakfast and frequently assess each other’s fields. Oz- Summer heat, pleasant autumn spur plentiful pumpkin crop By TIM HEARDEN Capital Press burn, for example, showed the group crop damage caused by army worms and brown wheat mites to familiarize them with the symptoms. “We’d just load up into trucks about once a month, and we’d look at different fields and different equipment we would use,” added 30-year-old Cody Cole. “Somebody would see something that the others wouldn’t see.” Improving soil health has emerged as the central theme. They’ve acquired compaction meters, penetrometers and oth- er devices to assess soil traits during their field trips, but Lakey insists the simplest tool is still the best — a shovel. For Christmas, he bought family and friends shovels for digging in fields and assessing soil and root structure. “I’ll admit, five years ago we would drive by all of our fields and maybe walk around the edge, but I never got out and dug in the soil,” Cole said. “Once we started these crop tours, it was like, ‘Wow, I’ve probably left a lot on the ta- ble because I haven’t done this.’” The collaboration traces back to 2012, when Lakey and Ozburn began consult- ing one another. A couple of years later, Cole joined their discussions. The text group has further expanded during the past two seasons, and now includes a Delta, Utah, grow- er who frequently lectures on soil health. Lakey is the group’s risk taker, having eliminated till- age on much of his farm and substituted a machine that stimulates soil microbe ac- tivity with tractor exhaust, in lieu of fertilizer, on half of his acres. Cole has made calculat- ed changes, planting a series of test plots this summer to evaluate cover crop blends for cattle forage and soil-health benefits under his region’s dryland conditions. Ozburn considers himself to be the “hardest to convince on newer ideas.” “When we try stuff, we try it on a smaller scale,” Ozburn said. “Dan is the go-big kind of guy.” By sharing knowledge of the experiments they’re con- ducting across their collective acres, Lakey believes he and his friends stand to discover best farming practices much faster. “One thing I’ve learned is there’s no right way to do it, and everybody farms differ- ent,” Lakey said. Holly Rippon-Butler, with the New York-based Nation- al Young Farmers Coalition, sees a trend of young farm- ers around the country using modern technology to net- work and share information. “They are really yearning to find ways they can create community in these rural ar- eas,” she said. Lebanon livestock auction celebrates 30th anniversary By ALIYA HALL Capital Press ANDERSON, Calif. — Pumpkin farms in California report some of the best yields in memory as pleasant weather this fall has brought scores of tourists to enjoy their attrac- tions. At Hawes Farms in Ander- son, grower Greg Hawes is marveling at what he says is the best crop he’s seen in about a dozen years. “It just really looks good,” said Hawes, noting that siz- es and overall quality have improved from recent years. “Most of my other stuff like my grains didn’t do well, but the pumpkins are beautiful. Maybe they like the extra heat.” Wayne Bishop, owner of Bishop’s Pumpkin Farm, thinks so, too. Heat waves this summer delayed crop set a bit, which worried him in August and September, he said. But the crop turned out plentiful, and the temperatures in the 70s and 80s during Oc- tober brought in big crowds, he said. “It’s been a wonderful sea- son,” Bishop said. “I don’t ever remember weather any better than we’ve had this fall.” The season’s only blemish was a light rainstorm on Oct. 19-20, but such little rain was more of a help to unpicked pumpkins than a hindrance. “It’s nice to give them a lit- tle shot in the arm,” said Carl Hawkins, general manager of Hawes Farms. He added that mold and rot weren’t a concern. “We have some clear skies coming through, and next week it’s supposed to get back up into the 90s,” he said Oct. 20. The big yields and relative- ly warm weather should help pumpkin patches meet what is certain to be a high demand in the days leading up to Hallow- een. This year’s conditions were just right after several years in which weather complicated pumpkin season in one way or another. Last year, crews rushed to harvest as many pumpkins as possible in early October before anticipated rains came, eventually breaking records for the month in some areas. In 2015, hot weather lin- gered into October, keeping Tim Hearden/Capital Press Carl Hawkins, general manager of Hawes Farms in Anderson, Calif., takes a break from checking pumpkins after a storm passed over the area early Oct. 20. The farm is seeing some of its best pumpkin yields in years. people busy with summertime activities and stifling atten- dance, Bishop said. “People need to know that it’s fall and not summer any- more,” he said. “When it’s up in the 90s, people are not thinking about getting pumpkins.” And in 2014, a storm that dumped nearly 3 inches of rain in the northern Sacramento Val- ley in late September caused Hawes Farms to lose between 5 and 10 percent of its pumpkins to rot. California’s abundance comes as retailers in some areas of the country are reporting a pumpkin shortage, largely be- cause of hurricane and storm damage in Florida and Texas, CNBC reported. Home Depot, which usually sells about 1.5 million pump- kins per year, isn’t stocking as many this year, the network re- ported. However, demand for pumpkins has also waned this year as residents in hurri- cane-impacted areas focus on essentials. “When you have a natural disaster, it changes everybody’s priorities,” C. Britt Beemer, a retail analyst with America’s Research Group in Orlando, Fla., told CNBC. Nationwide, the retail price of pumpkins has aver- aged $3.89 apiece, down from $3.95 a year ago, reported the USDA’s National Retail Report for specialty crops. The per-pound average on Oct. 20 was 33 cents, down from 46 cents the week before and 89 cents a year ago, accord- ing to the USDA. In a typical year, nearly 6,000 acres of pumpkins are grown in California, one of the nation’s top six pumpkin-pro- ducing states. Most are planted in May or June for the Hallow- een season, according to the University of California Coop- erative Extension. Most of the pumpkins grown in California are sold in the state, the California Farm Bureau Federation reported. LEBANON, Ore. — Coy Cowart lasted about a year in retirement before he became bored of fishing and hiking and decided he wanted to go back to work. Having initially worked in construction, Coy Cowart and his wife, Helen, wanted a business. In 1987 they pur- chased the Lebanon Auction Yard, where Helen Cowart had worked 25 years before. “We work for fun,” Hel- en Cowart, 81, said. “Some people never work, and then there’s people like us.” Although Helen and Coy Cowart, 83, still attend auc- tions, the yard is now run by their son, Terry, 57, and his wife, Lezlie, 54. Terry Cowart is the auctioneer, the fourth that the yard has had. On Thursday, Oct. 19, the Cowart family celebrated the 30th anniversary by auction- ing off 741 head of cattle. Helen Cowart laughed when she said the date only means that she and Coy were get- ting old. The anniversary also marked the retirement of Claude Swanson, who has worked at the auction for the full 30 years. Helen Cowart said she approached Swan- son because he was knowl- edgeable about sheep, but he also worked in the ring and sorted cattle. “The family has known him forever,” Lezlie Cowart said. “He’s a pretty cool old (guy) with a wealth of infor- mation. Claude’s never met a stranger.” Swanson, 83, said it was a good time to retire because he is going through chemo- therapy treatments for pros- tate cancer. “I wouldn’t quit Aliya Hall/For the Capital Press Helen and Coy Cowart bought the Lebanon Auction Yard in 1987. Coy Cowart said that he assumes the grandchildren will eventually take over the business and keep it in the family. if it wasn’t for this cancer,” he said. Swanson’s knowledge has left an imprint on the community that regularly attends the auction. He said that people have asked his opinion on the animals, es- pecially sheep, which are his expertise. But the auction yard means more than animals. Swanson and Helen and Le- zlie Cowart agree the cama- raderie with the customers is most rewarding. “To me, it’s an awful lot of work, but there’s also a lot of pride to have the same customers and a fairly large business,” Lezlie Cowart said. Even through the auction yard’s tough times the cus- tomers have remained loyal. In 1993, the building burned down, but customers and members of the community volunteered time and money to help the Cowarts rebuild. They put up a tent and didn’t cancel the auction. “The fire just about broke us,” Coy Cowart said, but the response of the customers “makes the heart feel good.” Along with the auction, Coy and Helen Cowart creat- ed a cattle-holding equipment business, and own three semi- trucks to haul cattle. Although the number of cattle varies depending on the week, Helen Cowart estimat- ed that it averages 200 to 600 head. The auction is held ev- ery Thursday, except Thanks- giving, at 1 p.m. The biggest challenge fac- ing the auction yard is labor, Lezlie Cowart said, because few people want to do it and she can’t do it by herself. Al- though plenty of children are around, they’re too young to control the animals, she said. Coy Cowart said he as- sumes the grandchildren will eventually take over the business, and he wants it to be that way. Already his two- year-old great grandson, Hen- ry, can tell every cow apart. He learned Holstein first, Coy Cowart said. 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