Friday, March 26, 2021 Volume 94, Number 13 CapitalPress.com $2.00 EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press WIN FALLS, Idaho — Brent Frei grew up on a dryland wheat farm on the Camas Prairie of northern Idaho. And like every farm kid, he picked his share of rocks without giving much thought to the age-old, perennial chore. It is one of the worst jobs on any farm. Now, after a successful career in high-tech, he has turned his atten- tion to that chore, starting a com- pany that uses high-fl ying drones and robotics to locate and pick up the rocks that can damage farm implements. T High-tech career After graduating from Gran- geville, Idaho, High School in 1984, Frei set out for Dartmouth Col- lege in New Hampshire. He earned a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering in 1989. From there, he went to work for Motorola, where he learned soft- ware development and designed batteries for cellular phones. He moved to Microsoft in Bellevue, Wash., where he built customer data systems. Along the way, he founded two software companies, Onyx Soft- ware and Smartsheet, which he took from inception to initial pub- lic off ering. He also founded Harvest West Investments, a farmland investment fund that owns and manages farms in Washington, Oregon and Idaho. Frei left his executive role at Smartsheet in 2016 but remains on its board of directors. That gave him more time to return home and help out on the family farm, which has grown to 6,000 acres. And that’s where he was — in the heat, picking rock by hand with his 81-year-old dad — when the absur- dity of the manual task hit him. “I thought, why isn’t this auto- mated?” he said. “Everything is automated.” He was a successful business- man who knew a lot about soft- ware, robotics and artifi cial intelli- gence, but he was still picking rock by hand all day in the hot sun. And he couldn’t understand why tech- nology hadn’t been applied to the worst, most boring job on the farm. “Why has this not been solved?” he said. He realized all the pieces for See Robot, Page 9 Drone maps fi eld, then system uses automation to remove rocks TerraClear ABOVE: TerraClear’s leaders are, left to right, Ryan Frei, operations; Heidi Lindsley, marketing director; Brent Frei, CEO and founder; and Trevor Thompson, president. TOP: A drone is used to locate and measure all of the rocks in a farm fi eld. Carol Ryan Dumas/Capital Press Terra Clear After the drone fl ies over the farm fi eld, it generates a map showing the location and size of rocks. TerraClear’s rock picker is used in conjunction with a drone-generated map of all the rocks in a fi eld. The opera- tor follows the map to fi nd each rock. Timing key to how Asian giant hornets might impact hives SEE RELATED STORY ON PAGE 9 By DON JENKINS Capital Press Karla Salp/WSDA An Asian giant hornet. Bees pollinate berries in north- west Washington before Asian giant hornet colonies mature in the summer, a sequence that may shield commercial beekeepers and farmers from being stung by the invasive wasp. Western Washington’s larg- est beekeeper, Eric Thompson, pollinates raspberries and blue- berries in the spring in northern Whatcom County, the only area in the U.S. where Asian giant hornets have been seen. Thompson said March 18 that people he hasn’t heard from in decades call up and ask if he’s concerned. By the time the hor- nets come out, though, his bees are off to other jobs, spread out as far away as Montana. “The news media in this coun- try has run wild with the murder hornet thing,” he said. “I haven’t worried about it. “I don’t see how they can be detrimental to agriculture at this point.” Asian giant hornets have a fearsome reputation for decap- itating honeybees. Agriculture offi cials in Washington and Brit- ish Columbia are out to search and destroy nests before the hor- nets slaughter pollinators. A bigger threat may be to the ecosystem if the hornets attack wild bees, wasps or other insects. Asian giant hornets are a public hazard, too, infl icting sometimes lethal stings. Washington State University bee expert Tim Lawrence, pic- tured on his college webpage happily covered in live bees, said public safety concerns are real, but it’s too early to say hornets menace agriculture. “Let’s not go overboard. It’s already hyped up more than it needs to be,” Lawrence said. “To See Hornets, Page 9 Five wolves found dead in NE Oregon By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press An investigation is continuing into the deaths of fi ve wolves dis- covered early last month in north- east Oregon. On Feb. 9, the Oregon Depart- ment of Fish and Wildlife reported a GPS collar on a wolf emitted a “mortality signal” in the Mount Harris area near La Grande. Offi - cers with the Oregon State Police Fish and Wildlife Division found fi ve wolves dead. The carcasses were taken to a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service forensic lab to determine a cause of death. Results have yet to be released. OSP Capt. Tim Fox said he could not immediately provide additional details about the dead wolves, such as their size, sex and pack. Rob- lyn Brown, wolf program coor- dinator for ODFW, also declined to comment, citing the pending investigation. March is about Honoring our Ag Producers. THANK YOU! Oregon has a minimum wolf pop- ulation of 158, as of the most recent ODFW survey in 2019, though the actual number is likely higher. Most packs are concentrated in the state’s northeast corner, including Union County where the fi ve dead wolves were found. Kathleen Gobush, Northwest program director for the conserva- tion group Defenders of Wildlife, said the deaths were suspicious, though without knowing the cause of death, they cannot say whether WE UNDERSTAND YOUR WORK AND DEDICATION. WHAT YOU NEED TO BE SUCCESSFUL. TO EACH OF OUR AG PRODUCERS. poaching may have been to blame. “It highlights the pressing need for a thorough investigation, for sure,” Gobush said. Gobush, who is in Seattle, said she has never heard of so many wolves found dead at once in either Oregon or Washington. ”We’re all waiting to hear what the cause of death is,” she said. “A lot of this is a mystery.” Rodger Huff man, a rancher in See Wolves, Page 9 Bank of Eastern Oregon’s Mission has always been to provide Financial Support for the Ag Industry. 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