Capital Press EMPOWERING PRODUCERS OF FOOD & FIBER Friday, December 24, 2021 Volume 94, Number 52 CapitalPress.com $2.00 THE EVOLUTION OF THE CHRISTMAS TREE Industry searches for a better tree By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press T he Christmas tree industry has forced itself to evolve. In less than a century, it’s shifted from relying on forest byproducts to producing a highly specializing horticultural crop. That doesn’t mean the industry’s transfor- mation is complete. “It’s just a constant improvement that’s still going on,” said Ken Brown, a grower and former Oregon State Uni- versity Extension specialist. Farmers are becoming less reliant on seed collected from the wild and are instead planting seeds grown in dedicated orchards. Rather than gamble on inherited traits, they’re now shaping the genet- ics of Christmas trees by selecting the best specimens and allowing them to cross breed. The breeding eff ort is a mix of private and public endeavors: Farm- ers have established their own seed orchards, as have universities such as OSU. “More and more, we rely on seed orchards to get seed,” said Cal Land- gren, OSU Extension’s tree special- Mateusz Perkowski ist. “My motivation is to get the most Capital Press seed out of the most trees to the most Farmers pre- growers as widely as possible.” sented Oregon State University ‘Intriguing’ crop The prospect of refi ning a rela- offi cials with a tively new crop is precisely what 30-foot Christ- drew Ken Brown to the Christmas mas tree tree industry several decades ago. “It was something intriguing for me — just taking a wild tree and culturing it to make it into a good-looking Christmas tree,” he said. “Growers are always experiment- ing on their cultural practices and we’re always selecting better seed stock.” Production in the Pacifi c Northwest has long been dom- inated by Noble fi rs and Douglas fi rs, but the industry is increasingly interested in several species that originated along the coast of the Black Sea: Nordmann fi rs, Turkish fi rs, and most recently, Trojan fi rs. See Tree, Page 9 Mateusz Perkowski/Capital Press Cal Landgren, Oregon State University Extension Christmas tree specialist, examines a Trojan fi r tree at the university’s seed orchard in Aurora, Ore. The species is the most recent among several that orig- inated near the Black Sea to draw attention from Northwest growers. Reindeer farm spreads Christmas cheer By SIERRA DAWN MCCLAIN Capital Press Cindy Murdoch, 65, owner of Timber- view Farm, stretched out her hand. “C’mere, silly,” she said. A reindeer wearing a red and green hal- ter bearing the name “Comet” in white let- tering stepped forward, allowing Murdoch to stroke its antlers. When the average American thinks of reindeer, said Murdoch, they think of Santa Claus. Reindeer have been synon- ymous with Christmas since Clement C. Moore penned his famous poem, “A Visit from Saint Nicholas,” in 1823. According to Michelle Dennehy, Ore- gon Department of Fish and Wildlife spokeswoman, this is Oregon’s only per- mitted reindeer operation, a farm with nine licensed reindeer. Because of the folklore surrounding fl ying reindeer, Murdoch said people are often surprised to learn that reindeer are real. “Some people think they’re like uni- corns,” said Murdoch. “They think they’re fairytale creatures.” Experts say the species, though not magical, is remarkable. The reindeer, a member of the Cervi- dae family of hoofed ruminant mammals, is a circumpolar species, meaning it lives in countries all around the arctic circle, according to the Smithsonian Institution. Reindeer have been domesticated for millennia. According to a 2021 study in the Journal of Anthropological Archae- ology, “reindeer herding has been cultur- ally and economically important for many peoples.” The earliest known domestication, according to the Journal, can be traced Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press See Reindeer, Page 9 Reindeer at Timberview Farm in Oregon. Oregon grower keeps chestnut industry alive SWEET HOME, Ore. — Carol Porter recalls sitting in a doctor’s offi ce in the mid-1980s, fl ipping through National Geographic, when she came across a story on chestnuts. The article brought back child- hood memories. Her parents, Ital- ian immigrants, had exposed her to roasted chestnuts and sweetbreads Sierra Dawn McClain/Capital Press made with chestnut fl our when she Carol Porter, 79, owner of Sweet was little. Porter said she wondered Home Chestnut Farm, peels a if she could plant an orchard. chestnut. It would be a big change of pace; Porter and her husband, now deceased, were cattle ranchers, riding horse- Sierra Dawn McClain back often 20 Capital Press miles a day Chestnuts from on Colorado Sweet Home ranges. Chestnut Farm. “This was altogether dif- ferent,” said Por- ter, 79. The couple settled in Sweet Home, Ore., where they started a grass-fed beef and pork operation Me r r y as ! WE’RE HONORED TO SERVE YOU. C h r i s t m Thank You to our Customers and Community. CALDWELL LOAN OFFICE 208-402-4887 / 422 S. 9TH ST ONTARIO LOAN OFFICE 541-889-4464 / 435 SW 24TH ST and, in the early 1990s, planted a chestnut orchard. Today, Sweet Home Chestnut Farm is one of about 10 chestnut operations in the Northwest, keep- ing alive the tradition of “chestnuts roasting on an open fi re.” According to Oregon State Uni- versity’s Extension Service, the hard- wood American chestnut grew in vast stands across the continent when early settlers arrived. The chestnuts were a staple for both settlers and many wildlife species. See Chestnuts, Page 9 ONTARIO CALDWELL JED MYERS NIAL BRADSHAW ALAN BULLARD BECKY TEMPLE GAYE DOANATO KENDRA BUTTERFIELD LOGAN SCHLEICHER S228630-1 By SIERRA DAWN McCLAIN Capital Press Member FDIC