2 CapitalPress.com Friday, April 30, 2021 People & Places Small cows, big rewards for ranchers By JULIA HOLLISTER For the Capital Press EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Established 1928 OAKDALE, Calif. — The sight of shaggy Scottish Highland cattle grazing on tall grass causes regular traf- fic jams outside Oakdale. While the breed can be found in all 50 states, the pint-size cattle originally from Scotland still catch the eye of curious drivers. First, a little about these unique cattle. If the creators of the Mup- pets had designed a cow it would likely resemble the Scottish Highland. Their short, shaggy stat- ure, combined with a gen- tle disposition, make them an attractive alternative to standard cattle, especially for newbie hobby ranch- ers who are more interested in pasture pets than meat production. Two enterprising ranchers outside Oakdale have discov- ered that market. Kera and LeeAna Brichetto — who are also sisters-in-law — are raising the Scottish Highland cattle, aiming to fill a niche created by newcomers to the rural lifestyle. “The Highland cattle are a good fit for acreages, plus they are docile and easy to handle,” LeeAna Brichetto said. She and Kera began talking about the market they saw developing and Capital Press Managers Joe Beach ..................... Editor & Publisher Western Innovator KERA BRICHETTO AND LEEANA BRICHETTO Anne Long ................Advertising Manager Carl Sampson .................. Managing Editor Jessica Boone ............ Production Manager Samantha McLaren ....Circulation Manager Entire contents copyright © 2021 EO Media Group dba Capital Press Residence: Oakdale, Calif. Occupations: Ranchers An independent newspaper Family: Kera is married to husband Joe, and they have a son. LeeAna is married to husband John, and they have a daughter. published every Friday. Capital Press (ISSN 0740-3704) is published weekly by EO Media Group, 2870 Broadway NE, Salem OR 97303. Periodicals postage paid at Portland, OR, and at additional mailing offices. Kera Brichetto Sisters-in-law and ranchers LeeAna Brichetto, left, and Kera Brichetto raise Scottish Highland cattle for pets and breeding stock. This 4-month-old bull calf is part of their fold, the Scottish term for herd. decided to venture into the Scottish Highland breed together. They bought cows from California, Oregon and Wisconsin. Though the extended Brichetto family farms cher- ries, walnuts, almonds and runs a feedlot operation in the Central Valley, the Scot- tish Highlands were new to them. “In our experience so far, the animals are lovely to raise but not for their meat or milk,” Kera said. “Highlands are a slower maturing breed of cattle and their shaggy coats make up for their lack of fat insulation like other breeds have. Beneath all that soft hair, they are relatively leaner animals.” But they are a rugged breed and will eat just about anything. The fold runs on about 50 acres of irrigated pasture. The Brichettos’ fold — groups of Highlands are called folds instead of herds — varies from 39 to 50 inches hook height, which is measured at the hip. Part of the focus is to breed small framed High- lands. They have two bulls. Smaller cows tend to bring higher prices — into the thousands of dollars for a registered calf. Highland cattle are known for being easy to raise, doc- ile and curious and take lon- ger to mature and reproduce than most other breeds. However, they live longer and can reproduce well into their teens. “Since buying our first few Highlands near the end of 2020, LeeAna and I have grown our fold to 20, have raised and sold a few calves and have fall 2021 calves on their way,” Kera said. “We are excited to expand our fold and continue to educate curious bystanders on the breed.” POSTMASTER: send address changes to Capital Press, P.O. Box 2048 Salem, OR 97308-2048. To Reach Us Circulation ...........................800-781-3214 Email ........... Circulation@capitalpress.com Main line .............................503-364-4431 News Staff Idaho Carol Ryan Dumas ..............208-860-3898 Boise Brad Carlson .......................208-914-8264 Western Washington Don Jenkins .........................360-722-6975 Drive-thru Ag Fest a hit with families By BRENNA WIEGAND For the Capital Press CANBY, Ore. — In the past 34 years, Ag Fest orga- nizers have always kept the event focused on making agri- cultural education fun and hands-on, executive director Michele Ruby said. “Given the pandemic, we can only stick to one: making ag educa- tion fun.” This year’s drive-thru ver- sion — state COVID rules prevented the usual up close and personal experience — was like starting over, with a fraction of the usual plan- ning time, but the board, vol- unteers, sponsors and ag com- munity pulled together and were pleased with the result. Setting the stage for the drive-thru event was a sprawl- ing table — set for 168 diners. “That’s the average num- ber of people a farmer can feed every day,” Ruby explained. The next stop was a pio- Brenna Wiegand/For the Capital Press Dairy Princess Ambassadors Samantha Arnold, left, and Libby Glassley pass out Ag-venture goody bags at this year’s drive-thru Oregon Ag Fest. The princesses edu- cated visitors about the dairy industry. neer scene complete with a covered wagon, open fire cooking and Cynthia Chris- tensen of the Yamhill Valley Heritage Center operating a spinning wheel. “The kids like to stop and chat a little bit, but when I’m spinning, they’re much more intent,” Christensen said. “Spinning always gets peo- ple’s attention.” The parade of cars and mini-vans then rolled through a display of an antique tractor followed by the latest in farm machinery. “The kids can’t take their pictures inside the giant tires, but they still ‘ooh’ and ‘aah’ over it,” Ruby said. Next up, Cole Wilson, 8, displayed his chickens and calves and greeted guests with enthusiasm. His flock of 13 chickens — not counting the chicks — kept him busy and yielded eggs. His two calves are bot- tle-fed. “They don’t really rec- ognize me right now because normally I’m in my pajamas when I feed them,” he said. Amy and Gerry Preston toured Ag Fest in their mini- van with their children. They said they found the event a good conversation-starter on all things ag. “We both have farming and ranching backgrounds, and we want the kids to know about this stuff,” Amy Pres- ton said. “It was fun to get out on a Friday afternoon and do something together; it’s a real success and all the giveaways were a nice treat.” Since kids couldn’t get their hands dirty at the show, the Oregon Association of Nurseries handed out infor- mation and bags of plants for children to take home and grow. There were also rotating exhibits of dogs herding ducks and llamas and sheep being sheared. Dairy Princess Ambas- sadors Samantha Arnold of Clackamas County and Libby Glassley of Yamhill and Polk counties greeted mini-vans and cars with “Ag-venture” goody bags and pointed them toward the Oregon Dairy Women and their ice cream, milkshakes and grilled cheese sandwiches. Eastern Washington Matthew Weaver ................509-688-9923 Oregon George Plaven ....................406-560-1655 Mateusz Perkowski .............800-882-6789 Sierra Dawn McClain ..........503-506-8011 Designer Randy Wrighthouse .............800-882-6789 To Place Classified Ads Telephone (toll free) ............800-882-6789 Online ...........CapitalPress.com/classifieds Subscriptions Mail rates paid in advance Easy Pay U.S. $4 /month (direct withdrawal from bank or credit card account) 1 year U.S. ...........................................$55 2 years U.S. ........................................$100 1 year Canada .....................................$275 1 year other countries ...........call for quote 1 year Internet only .........................$49.99 1 year 4-H, FFA students/teachers .......$30 9 months 4-H, FFA students/teachers ..$25 Visa and Mastercard accepted To get information published Mailing address: Idaho dairy welcomes triplets By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press IDAHO FALLS — Reed’s Dairy beat the odds with the birth of triplet female Holstein calves on Feb. 23. “It was quite a deal to have them all as healthy as they were. They were big calves,” Alan Reed, presi- dent of Reed’s Dairy, said. The calves were born about 6 a.m. and were only a little smaller than what a single calf would be. They were all healthy, well and survived, he said. The triplets were born to a cow about five years old, and it was her third birth. She was big, and Reed and his herdsman wondered if she might be carrying twins. But they were completely Capital Press P.O. Box 2048 Salem, OR 97308-2048 REED’S DAIRY News: Contact the main office or news staff member closest to you, For more information, visit: www.reedsdairy.com send the information to surprised by triplets. The dairy occasionally gets twins and has had one other set of triplets, but they didn’t survive. “It was just amazing we had triplets and all survived. It was just a fun thing, so unusual, just fun to have it on your dairy. We were just thrilled about it,” he said. The calves were born without assistance, and no pulling was needed. “It was really something that that mom just had those calves,” he said. Statistics on triplet births in dairy cattle and the chance of all-heifer triplets are hard to come by. A 2016 article in the Lansing Journal refer- enced a 2015 Polish study that put the occurrence of triplet births in dairy cat- tle at 1 in 100,000, with the odds of having all heif- ers at 1 in 8 triplet births. A 2016 Associated Press arti- cle pegged the occurrence of triplet heifers at 1 in every 700,000 births. Neither Reed nor his herdsman know of any- one having surviving triplet calves, he said. Reed has two of the calves in the petting area at his Idaho Falls dairy and ice cream store. The petting area houses other animals as well Frundle, sfrundle@clarkcd.org management practices for your pas- ture. Whether you continually graze or rotational graze, there are solu- tions to improve productivity. Lisa Schuchman from USDA-NRCS will teach you how to get the most out of your pasture system while also keeping poop out of surface waters. This is the second of a three-part webinar series, Manure Matters. Contact: Sam Frundle, sfrundle@ clarkcd.org newsroom@capitalpress.com or mail it to “Newsroom,” c/o Capital Press. Include a contact telephone number. Letters to the Editor: Send your comments on agriculture-related public issues to opinions@capitalpress.com, or mail your letter to “Opinion,” c/o Capital Reed’s Dairy Alan Reed with the new triplet calves. WEDNESDAY MAY 5 Got Manure? Great Ideas for Manure Management (virtual): 6-7:30 p.m. Do you have horses, live- stock, or other critters that are mak- ing managing their manure diffi- cult? Join Clark Conservation District for a presentation by Alayne Blickle of Horses for Clean Water about cre- ative and practical solutions to solv- ing your mud and manure issues and keeping our streams clean. This is the first of a three-part webinar series, Manure Matters. Contact: Sam THURSDAY-SATURDAY MAY 6-8 Junior Livestock Show of Spo- kane (live): 9 a.m. Spokane County Fair and Expo Center, 404 N. Havana, St., Spokane Valley, Wash. The Junior Livestock Show of Spokane will be in person this year. A live auction will be May 8. Face masks and social dis- tancing are required. Website: www. juniorshow.org WEDNESDAY MAY 12 THURSDAY-SATURDAY MAY 13-15 Poop in the Pasture? Ideas for Pasture Management (vir- tual): 6-7:30 p.m. Join Clark Conser- vation District to learn about best Washington FFA Convention (virtual): The convention will main- tain its traditional agenda, with one session streamed on Thurs- 300 words. Deadline: Noon Monday. and only has room for two calves. The two calves will probably stay there another month, he said. The triplet calves will join Reed’s herd of about 185 Holsteins to produce milk for Reed’s Dairy prod- ucts, which include bottled milk, cheese, ice cream and other products. The third-generation dairy operates a home deliv- ery service in Idaho Falls and the Treasure Valley. It also has two ice cream shops in the Idaho Falls area and two in the Boise area. Capital Press ag media day and Friday evenings and two on Saturday. The new state officers will be announced Saturday eve- ning. Website: www.washingtonffa. org/91st-convention WEDNESDAY MAY 19 Index CALENDAR Submit upcoming ag-related events on www.capitalpress.com or by email to newsroom@capital- press.com. Press. Letters should be limited to FRIDAY-SUNDAY MAY 14-16 California FFA’s 93rd State Leadership Conference (online): This year California FFA members from all corners of the state will have access to the premier leadership event offered by our association as it will be delivered through a multi-fac- eted online platform. The conference will be three days jam packed with learning, growth and inspiration. Website: www.calaged.org Manure Matters — Keep- ing Poop Out of the Water (vir- tual): 6-7:30 p.m. Have you ever wondered what effect your crit- ters’ poop is having on our water- sheds? Join Clark Conservation District to learn about the moni- toring Clark County does on bacte- ria in our waterways. Experts Brent Davis and Eric Lambert from Clark County will present on county reg- ulations and cover what you can be doing to keep our local watersheds free of your livestock and horse manure. This is the third of a three- part webinar series, Manure Mat- ters. Contact: Sam Frundle, sfrun- dle@clarkcd.org CapitalPress.com FarmSeller.com MarketPlace.capitalpress.com facebook.com/CapitalPress facebook.com/FarmSeller twitter.com/CapitalPress youtube.com/CapitalPressvideo Dairy .......................................................7 Markets .................................................10 Opinion ...................................................6 Correction policy Accuracy is important to Capital Press staff and to our readers. If you see a misstatement, omission or factual error in a headline, story or photo caption, please call the Capital Press news department at 503-364-4431, or send email to newsroom@capitalpress.com. We want to publish corrections to set the record straight.