6 CapitalPress.com Friday, April 9, 2021 Oak Park Farms: Efficiencies are key to hazelnuts By BRENNA WIEGAND For the Capital Press SHEDD, Ore. — Oak Park Farms dates back to 1850, when Washing- ton L. Coon took out a donation land claim in Linn County, Ore., eight years before the first hazelnut was planted in the state. He returned to Pennsylvania to marry Susan, a widow with children, and they returned over the Oregon Trail. His stepsons took on the adjoin- ing 320 acres. Today, the family’s fifth and sixth generations manage 5,000 acres in the fertile Willamette Valley. Mike Coon and his son, KC, and Mike’s brother, Don Coon, and his son, Hans, raise mostly grassy rotation crops. KC heads up the cropping side of things. “Our dads doubled it from what it was, and our grandpas doubled it from what it was, so every generation is seeing roughly 100% growth in the number of acres we farm,” Hans said. In 2012, Hans introduced hazel- nuts onto the acreage and has since Oak Park Farms Hans Coon, left, and his cousin KC, with daughter Mia, at Oak Park Farms in Shedd, Ore. In recent years the family farm began adding hazelnuts to their primarily grassy crop operation. built it up to 250 acres. “We’d seen what Ryan Glaser over at Mid Valley Farms was doing and really like their program,” Hans Coon said. “They talked us through it and told us you can make money at them if you do it right.” He said his senior project at Ore- gon State University was an analysis of the basic financials of hazelnuts. “I know a lot more about the num- bers now, but hopefully they’ll still work out,” he said. He sees continued growth in hazelnuts. “When we look at the almond industry and the walnut industry, they still dwarf us in scale,” he said. “I think to have any kind of true market impact and be able to meet reasonable demand we just need to keep putting more hazelnuts in.” The keys to making a profit in hazelnuts are to plant in good soil, keep an eye on expenses and have a plan. “It pencils out if you put them on good ground and watch your expenses and have a direction you want to be heading in,” Coon said. This includes bringing large-scale farming practices to hazelnut grow- ing. In addition to using a large track fertilizer spreader, the Coons process their nuts in bulk. “We specifically designed all of our orchards for bulk processing, so whereas standard headland is 15 feet, mine are about 50 to 75 on aver- age,” Coon said. “We’re the only ones I know of who are running a shuttle truck, essentially a bankout wagon for the harvester so it never has to stop. “Most everyone in the hazelnut industry uses 4-by-4 wooden boxes to put their hazelnuts in and trans- port them and we’re doing it in semi- trucks,” Coon said. “We’re trying to pick up efficiencies everywhere. “It’s not that we’re smarter than anybody else; it’s just that up until our generation the hazelnut indus- try in Oregon has been boutique so it needed boutique methods of pro- duction,” Coon said. “We came from 100-foot sprayers and all that stuff so we’re looking at it thinking we’ve got to do this fast; we’ve got to be effi- cient and we’ve got to be effective; what’s the best way we can do that?” Their program coming out of the gate is meant to be different, he said. “We don’t want to handle boxes or be in the field any longer than we have to; we want to get in and get out quick.” Manufacturers of quality farm equipment since 1977. GVF Orbit Lift Pruning Towers GVF Hedgers, Toppers & Skirters GVF Rough Terrain Forklifts Smooth operation with a powerful hydro-drive system. Quality built, rugged & safe. Four models available: 12’, 16’, 20’, 25’ We offer an extensive line of heavy duty sickle bar hedgers, toppers and skirters for maintenance trimming. Fast, powerful machines that operate smoothly. These rugged and dependable Tier IV lifts get the job done quickly and comfortably. W E S P E C I A L I Z E I N B U L K BAG S ! BAGS: • Seed Bags • Fertilizer Bags • Feed Bags • Potato Bags • Printed Bags • Plain Bags • Bulk Bags • Totes • Woven Polypropylene • Bopp • Polyethylene • Pocket Bags • Roll Stock & More! HAY PRESS SUPPORT: • Hay Sleeves • Strap • Totes • Printed or Plain • Stretch Film (ALL GAUGES) WAREHOUSE PACKAGING: • Stretch Film • Pallet Sheets • Pallet Covers LOCATIONS: Albany, Oregon (MAIN OFFICE) Ellensburg, Washington CONTACT INFORMATION: Phone: 855-928-3856 Fax: 541-497-6262 info@westernpackaging.com ....................................................... CUSTOMER SERVICE IS OUR TOP PRIORITY! See the full line at www.gillisons.com w w w. w e s t e r n p a c k a g i n g. c o m 800-392-6059 S214651-1 S228704-1