12 CapitalPress.com Friday, June 26, 2020 Smaller cherry crop yields higher prices By DAN WHEAT For the Capital Press WENATCHEE, Wash. — The Pacific Northwest cherry crop is smaller than anticipated, which is bringing strong prices after Cali- fornia’s crop finished light. The average freight-on-board price on Northwest red cherries was around $52 per 20-pound box for the week of June 14-21, said Brian Focht, manager of the Northwest Cherry Marketing Association in Wenatchee. That’s $16 more per box than at the same time last year, he said. It’s common for the season’s first cherries to garner $70 per box or more for the first week of exports to Asia, but prices can be around $20 by July as supply over- takes demand. Increasing volume the week of June 21-28 will push prices down a little because demand will remain Cattle slaughter running close to a year ago By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press BURLEY, Idaho — Slaughter plants are run- ning closer to capacity and the backlog of cat- tle is shrinking as the industry shifts back into high gear after temporary COVID-19-related clo- sures knocked it back on its heels, a marketing expert says. Disruptions in meat- packing and beef demand due to the pandemic have thrown cattle markets into chaos over the last couple of months, fueling uncer- tainty about what the “new normal” might be. But the industry will find a road back to nor- mal and predictable activ- ity, John Nalivka, presi- dent and owner of Sterling Marketing in Vale, Ore., told cattle producers at the Idaho Cattle Association annual summer conference on Monday. In fact, “new normal” isn’t even in his vocabu- lary. The industry will get back to knowing what’s going on, he said. On the supply side, the top topic is the backlog of cattle due to packing plant closures and slowdowns — and he doesn’t think it’s as big as some have estimated. Tracing back through the process, he thinks the backlog is about 500,000 head, much less than the 1.0 million to 1.5 million estimated by other industry analysts. “We came into the year with a pretty big number of cattle on feed,” he said. But the number of cat- tle on feed on June 1 was down slightly from a year earlier. If the back- log were so big, that num- ber would still be large, he said. At the lowest point in the pandemic, processing was down 50% to 55%. But for the past two weeks, it’s been pretty close to a year ago, he said. Last week, 516,000 head of fed cattle were slaugh- tered. That’s about 90% of capacity utilization at kill plants, which is 566,000 head a week. At the same time last year, slaughter was at 95% of capacity, he said. Average capacity uti- lization from the first of 2019 through March 2020 was about 88%. Slaughter last week was unchanged from the previous week and only down about 4% from a year earlier, he said. “That’s all positive,” he said. The real issue is weight. The industry came into the year with record heavy weights on fed cattle, and they’ve only gotten heavier since Jan. 1, he said. “That’s really the issue for beef production,” he said. stronger than supply, Focht said. “Cherries are good and big. Retail is scrambling to get prod- uct for the Fourth of July to fill shelves,” Focht said. “If we come out of the Fourth well with retail- ers wanting more right away, hope- fully we can avoid deep discounts.” He said he would like to see cherries maintain retail prices of more than $2 per pound this sea- son rather than go to $1.75 to $1.80 per pound as has happened the last several years. Growers need better returns because lighter per-acre yields this year increase their costs, he said. “The way this thing is moving right now, it feels really good,” Focht said. “Pricing should remain strong all season.” Whether returns are better than last year (which was good) “depends on who you talk to, loca- tion, timing and a lot of other vari- ables,” he said. Dan Wheat/For the Capital Press Washington cherries from Chel- an Fresh Marketing on sale in the East Wenatchee, Wash., Safeway store on June 14. A smaller crop is generating strong prices. The industry’s promotional arm, Northwest Cherry Growers in Yakima, forecast a 20.2-mil- lion-box crop in May. Harvest started 11 days earlier than normal on May 28 at Finley south of Pasco. But rain and cool weather slowed crop progression, resulting in “the slowest start to harvest we have seen since 2013, which was the last time we had a rain-shortened crop,” said B.J. Thurlby, president of Northwest Cherry Growers. Rain damage to early varieties in the Yakima Valley reduced the crop estimate to 18 million boxes, and Thurlby said it soon may become 17 million. Focht said he guesses it will end up between 16 million and 17 million. A little over 4 million boxes had been shipped by June 22, and Thurlby expects approximate totals of 6.5 million boxes in June, 9 million in July and 1.5 million in August. Peaks of about 500,000 boxes per day will occur about June 26 or 27 and the week of July 13, he said. California’s crop, always ahead of the Northwest, was mostly done by June 5 at 6.4 million 18-pound boxes. California’s record is 9.6 million boxes in 2017. Brenda Thomas, presi- dent of Orchard View Farms in The Dalles and Oregon’s larg- est cherry grower, said multiple rains caused cullage from crack- ing and softness but that it would have been far worse without cool weather. Oregon has a more normal size crop than Washington because it had less damage from spring frost and poor pollination, she said. There’s plenty of good cher- ries to be harvested through July, and the company is practicing due diligence daily in hand washing, social distancing and face cover- ings in orchards and the packing house to guard against COVID-19, she said. Focht said orchard and pack- ing productivity has suffered from social distancing. COVID-19 apparently has been a bigger problem in Yakima County than elsewhere in Washington. COVID-19 puts hit on milk production By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press The coronavirus pan- demic has made for some wild times in dairy mar- kets, which in turn have led to significant downturns in U.S. milk production. May milk production at 18.8 billion pounds was down 1.1% year over year from almost 19.1 billion pounds in 2019, according to USDA National Agricul- tural Statistic Service. “Some of the dairy co-ops put in base excess plans, etc. It appears that has taken effect,” Bob Cropp, University of Wis- consin dairy economist, said in the latest “Dairy Situation and Outlook” podcast. Cow numbers in May were down 11,000 head from April and 15,000 head from March but were still 35,000 head above a year ago. “But there was a big drop University of Wisconsin Bob Cropp, left, and Mark Stephenson, University of Wisconsin economists. in milk production per cow,” he said. Per-cow production dropped 31 pounds and 1.5% year over year. “Definitely farmers have responded, reducing milk production — which is a factor we’re seeing in milk prices changes right now,” he said. The Class III milk price, which was $17.05 a hun- dredweight in January, dropped to $12.14 in May. But the June price is looking like it’ll be $20 with a record increase from one month to the next, he said. Lower milk produc- tion, government purchases, restaurants slowly opening up and restocking foodser- vice inventories were all fac- tors, he said. “It shows how sensitive this market is to relatively small changes, but that tight- ened things up,” he said. The cash cheese price for 40-pound blocks went from $1 a pound two months ago to $2.50 on Friday, Mark Stephenson, fellow dairy economist at the university, said. The big question is how long the higher prices will stay, Cropp said. The futures market jumped, with July Class III prices above $20. They trail off to the high $16s by the end of the year, he said. There’s a lot of uncer- tainty as to where prices will go. Milk production will be going down seasonally with the hot summer months. Restaurants are opening, and processors will be build- ing inventory for holiday demand. “We could see those prices at least in the next quarter holding pretty good, he said. The big question is whether farmers will con- tinue to hold down milk production. The other ques- tion is whether there’ll be another coronavirus out- break that slows things down again, he said. While 14 of the 24 report- ing states decreased milk production year over year — including a 1.5% decline in California and a 3.1% decline in Wisconsin — milk flowed strong in others. May milk production was up in seven states, includ- ing gains of 4.8% in Idaho, 4.6% in Colorado and 9.7% in South Dakota. “Farms are starting to react to these higher prices, at least in the West,” Ste- phenson said. Values for springers out there are higher than they’ve been in many years, he said. “This is just kind of tell- ing you that these guys want to make milk if the prices are going to be here. That’s going to kill the golden goose if they’re going to start making a lot of milk,” he said. Upper Snake irrigation outlook favorable By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press The Upper Snake River reser- voir system stood at 98% full June 21 as irrigators entered the season of heavy usage. Water supplies in the system are critical to large crop, livestock and dairy sectors in southeastern and south-central Idaho. Though sup- plies are down slightly, irrigators saved water during the unusually cool, wet weather through the first half of June. The amount of water stored in the reservoir system peaked early the week of June 15, said Brian Ste- vens, water operations manager for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation’s Upper Snake Field Office in Hey- burn, Idaho. All reservoirs filled except Pali- sades in eastern Idaho and Jackson Lake in Wyoming. They are now about 10,000 acre-feet or 8 inches, and 13,000 or 6 inches, from full- pool status, respectively, he said. Systemwide fill rates were 100% Capital Press File Palisades Reservoir within Idaho’s Grand Valley has a storage capacity of 1.2 million acre-feet and is part of the Upper Snake River system. in 2017 and 2018, 97% last year and 98% this year, Stevens said. The current rate is good given that Reclamation earlier this year per- formed flood-control operations at Palisades and Jackson, he said. The releases pose challenges related to runoff and irrigation timing. “We came within 100,000 acre- feet of filling the system com- pletely,” he said. The system holds about 4 million acre-feet. Reclamation on June 21, 2020, reported fill percentages at individ- ual reservoirs including 100% at Henry’s Lake, Island Park, Grassy Lake and Ririe; 99% at Palisades; 98% at Jackson and Lake Wolcott; and 95% at American Falls. “This is a good runoff year,” Ste- vens said. “It is good storage alloca- tion this year.” Water supplies are at or slightly below average in the Upper Snake region, said Tony Olenichak, who is watermaster with Water District 1 in Idaho Falls and a state Depart- ment of Water Resources program manager. “We have plenty of water,” he said “We will probably end up with 98 or 99% storage allocation. … No one is going to run out of water this year.” Irrigation diversions in much of eastern Idaho stopped tempo- rarily late in the June 15-19 week on timely rains, he said. More rain could come near the end of the June 22-26 week. “We have above-average precip- itation and below-average demand at this point,” Olenichak said. Kamren Koompin, who man- ages his family’s 7,500-acre farm near American Falls, said several good water years recently and the state’s longtime annual effort to recharge the large Eastern Snake Plain Aquifer have benefited pro- ducers. Recharge “is starting to be noticeable and pay off a little bit.” SpudLove, new farmer-owned potato chip line, partners with Farmers Ending Hunger By SIERRA DAWN MCCLAIN Capital Press A new farmer-owned potato chip line is hitting store shelves this summer. SpudLove Snacks’ new potato chip line is made from organic potatoes grown at Threemile Canyon Farms in Boardman, Ore. The same company that grows the potatoes owns the brand — uncommon among salty snack lines. According to SpudLove’s statement, the chips are 100% “USDA-certified organic, Non-GMO Project Verified and certified gluten-free.” The company’s lead- ers say they built the brand to appeal to millennials: with a clear farm source and health-conscious focus. SpudLove’s CEO, Sheila Stanziale, said the chips are cooked slowly in small batches using less oil than average chips and are sliced extra-thick so they’ll come out crunchy and “potato-y.” The snack company acres as range land and open spaces, according to its web- site. The farm grows organic potatoes, blueberries, car- rots, sweet corn, sweet peas, alfalfa and pasture, field corn and onions. Burt said SpudLove’s CEO, Stanziale, knew she SpudLove Snacks wanted SpudLove to “give SpudLove Snacks’ new organic potato chips are made back” in some way, so when with potatoes grown at Threemile Canyon Farms near Marty Myers, Threemile Boardman, Ore. Canyon Farms’ general man- ager, told her about Farm- announced John Burt, executive ers Ending Hunger and its chip line director of Farmers Ending introduced her to Burt, she Hunger, said Threemile Can- seemed eager to donate. this June yon Farms is now donating “Bless their hearts. It’s along with about 800 pounds of pota- a good project,” said Burt. a com- toes each week — enough to “I hope it grows, and as it mitment give 160 families each a five- grows, they can perhaps to donate Sheila pound bag. potatoes donate even more.” Stanziale Burt said Threemile Can- to Farm- The SpudLove brand was yon Farms has been a donor built by an already-exist- ers Ending since 2008, when the farm ing snack company, Luke’s Hunger every month. Farmers Ending Hun- starting donating dairy Organic Potato Chips. ger is an Oregon nonprofit, cows to be processed into The “SpudLove idea,” started in Hermiston, that hamburger. Stanziale said, was spawned collects donations of farm The 93,000-acre farm by Myers of Threemile Can- products like fresh produce operates three conventional yon Farms and the snack for the Oregon Food Bank, dairies and an organic dairy. It company’s business team. Threemile Canyon Farms’ which then distributes the has set aside 23,000 acres as food across the state. conservation area and 29,000 parent company, North Dakota-based potato giant R.D. Offutt Farms, was “heavily invested” in Luke’s Organic Potato Chips, according to those familiar with the history. In fall 2019, when an opportunity came to start SpudLove, R.D. Offcutt bought the brand so it could act as both potato chip maker and marketer. Although Threemile Canyon Farms produces the most potatoes by vol- ume for the brand, Spud- Love will work with two other organic potato farms in case bad weather or other unforeseen circum- stances disrupt supply from Threemile Canyon Farms. Stanziale declined to dis- close the name or location of the other two farms. SpudLove is available for sale at Whole Foods stores in the Pacific Northwest and online through Amazon. The chips, Stanziale said, will also be available soon at Market of Choice, Huckle- berry’s and other markets.