Friday, February 4, 2022 CapitalPress.com 3 Cool, wet spring in store for much of Pacifi c Northwest Short-term rentals must pass Oregon’s ‘farm impacts test,’ ruling says By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press SPOKANE — Spring and sum- mer will be cool and wet in the Pacifi c Northwest as the La Nina weather pat- tern lingers, a top meteorologist told attendees at the Spokane Ag Show. Art Douglas, professor emeritus of atmospheric sciences at Creighton Uni- versity in Omaha, Neb., presented his annual weather forecast Feb. 1. “You guys are going to be kind of the lucky folks as we go towards the spring,” Douglas told farmers. “You all have a better sense of how well your crop is established. My feeling is, you’re going to have a pretty good turnaround with that crop because of the spring forecast.” He pointed to ocean surface tempera- ture forecasts from the National Oce- anic and Atmospheric Administration anticipating that La Nina will continue into the summer. La Nina and El Nino are complex weather patterns that result from vari- ations in the Pacifi c Ocean’s surface temperatures. La Nina will favor a strong North Pacifi c high pressure system in Febru- ary, Douglas said. While the Pacifi c Northwest will remain cool and wet, the high pres- sure will eff ectively block the rest of the West and Midwest from Pacifi c moisture, he said. This will result in two consecutive dry winter months in a row, Douglas said. The region will warm up in March, with the only coolness in western Washington and Oregon because their off shore waters are so cold, Douglas said. He expected a slight cool down in April, then a warm-up again in May. Most of the U.S. will trend warmer and drier than normal through the Short-term lodging rent- als on farms and forest land in Oregon’s Clackamas County must be analyzed for their impacts on agriculture, according to a land use ruling. The state’s Land Use Board of Appeals has over- turned the county’s regula- tions for short-term rentals in farm and forest zones, ruling that the activities are subject to conditional use permits. In eff ect, the ruling will impose some constraints on short-term rentals in agricul- tural zones, rather than pro- hibiting them altogether, said Andrew Mulkey, rural lands attorney with 1,000 Friends of Oregon, a non- profi t that opposed the coun- ty’s regulations. “The way it was written and implemented, it would allow hotels to operate on farm and forest land,” Mulkey said. Rural landowners will still be able to participate in short- term rental services such as Airbnb, though they’ll likely be subject to rules for home businesses, he said. “That fi ts better with how resource land should be used, not an investment for an absentee landlord,” he said. Short-term rentals oper- ated by landowners who live on-site are less likely to inter- fere with surrounding farms, Mulkey said. “I doubt farmers would put up with frat parties every weekend, and that’s the benefi t of that model.” Capital Press was unable to reach attorneys for Clack- amas County for comment as of press time. Farmers who rely on over- night tourist lodging could use some direction from state lawmakers or the Depart- ment of Land Conservation and Development, said Scot- tie Jones, founder of the U.S. Farm Stay Association and a Matthew Weaver/Capital Press Art Douglas, professor of atmospheric sciences at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb., delivers his annual weather forecast Feb. 1 at the Spo- kane Ag Show. spring, Douglas said. Drought will intensify in the Southwest and winter wheat areas of the Plains. “The Pacifi c Northwest will trend slightly cooler and wetter than nor- mal and this may improve wheat pros- pects,” he said. The forecast suggests the drought in much of the U.S. will intensify in mid- 2022, Douglas said. La Nina condi- tions favor a hot, dry summer through- out the midsection of the country, with the Pacifi c Northwest on the western edge of the drought. Douglas predicted eastern and southern Idaho and Montana will be drier than normal. “The Pacifi c Northwest kind of stays cooler than normal and a little wetter than normal,” he said. “After having had the cool, wet spring, you’re going to keep on that coolness going into the summer.” The Plains and the Dakotas will remain “bone dry,” Douglas said, with dryness extending into the western and central Corn Belt, impacting a large por- tion of U.S. cattle grazing lands with drought. “I think we’re going to have some major problems going forward in the U.S. in terms of summer crops,” Doug- las said. Douglas said this year will most resemble the years 2000, 2011, 2012 and 2013 — “all terrible years in the midsection of the country.” Those were all La Nina years, he said. But the next set of years that the year could most resemble all turned into El Nino by the next the summer. “We’re at a tipping point in terms of the correlation,” Douglas said. “This is telling me that probably next year it’s going to pop. We’ll keep La Nina going this year, but come 2023, we’re likely to see early El Nino develop, say about March of 2023.” Oregon wine leads U.S. in growing direct-to-consumer sales By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press PORTLAND — Bol- stered by high demand and rising prices, Oregon’s wine industry led the U.S. in accelerating its rate of growth for direct-to-con- sumer sales in 2021, accord- ing to an analysis of ship- ment data from more than 1,300 wineries nationwide. The annual report, issued by Sovos ShipCompliant and Wines Vines Analyt- ics, shows Oregon winer- ies shipped 560,702 cases of wine valued at $285.5 million. That represents an increase of 12.9% in volume and 18.7% in sales value over 2020, outperforming all other wine regions across the country. Pinot noir dominated the share of Oregon direct-to- consumer sales, account- ing for more than half of the state’s wine shipments and two-thirds of the total sales value. Even with a 5.1% increase in the average price per bottle — up to $51.29 — shipments of Pinot noir still jumped 8.2%. “This translates into an undeniable increase in demand for Oregon wines, and Oregon Pinot noir in particular,” the report states. Sarah Murdoch, com- munications director for the Oregon Wine Board, said Oregon only produces 2% of the nation’s wine, but has garnered a reputation for high quality, driving up demand among wholesalers and retailers. “We’re still little, but we’re just getting more and more well known,” Mur- doch said. “That demand is really hard to create in a crowded marketplace.” Last year also saw a “great return to Wine Coun- try” following pandemic closures in 2020, Murdoch said. More people were comfortable visiting tasting rooms, and wineries them- selves became more savvy with online marketing. “These things really helped people buy and have more Oregon wine shipped to them,” Murdoch said. While Oregon wines account for only 6.8% of the value of direct-to-con- sumer shipments nation- wide, that is more than dou- ble its share from a decade ago, the report states. It isn’t just Willamette Valley Pinot noir. In 2021, Chardonnay shipments from Oregon increased 28.7% in volume and 36.4% in value over 2020. That includes a 6% increase in the average price per bottle. Sparkling wine is also gaining steam in Oregon, increasing 60.7% in value and 55.6% in volume over 2020. Murdoch said Pinot noir has long been the bellwether winegrape variety in Ore- gon, though she described Chardonnay as a “sleeping giant.” Between 2016 and 2021, Chardonnay plantings increased 43% in Oregon, to 2,600 acres. “As plantings go up, our optimism in that grape goes up, and so does the atten- tion,” Murdoch said. Industry-wide, direct-to- consumer wine shipments in 2021 returned to normal following pandemic-fueled turmoil of 2020, the report states. Total sales value eclipsed $4 billion for the fi rst time. That was due to the largest ever year-over- year increase in the average price per bottle, up 11.8% to $41.16. However, the large increase in average price per bottle comes on the heels of a 9.5% decrease in 2020, when more fi rst-time buyers stuck at home were purchasing less expensive wines, and wineries were off ering unusually large discounts. farmer in Alsea, Ore. “The problem is the coun- ties are all interpreting it dif- ferently,” she said. “It makes it really complicated for us as farmers if we’re trying to add a farm stay to our property.” According to LUBA, short-term rentals must undergo a “farm impacts test” to determine that they don’t impair agricultural and forestry practices or signifi - cantly increase their cost. In contrast, the regulations adopted by Clackamas County in 2020 allow short-term rental use “without any requirement to obtain specifi c authorization at all, let alone a requirement to satisfy the farm impacts test,” the ruling said. The county’s regulations allow “overnight, transient lodging as an outright per- mitted use” in farm and for- est zones even though it’s not allowed under statewide land use rules, according to LUBA. According to the county, short-term rentals are a resi- dential and not a commercial land use, so who occupies the dwelling isn’t relevant once it’s been built in a farm or forest zone. LUBA rejected the argu- ment, ruling that short-term rentals must be expressly allowed in farm and forest zones, so it’s not relevant that they haven’t been specifi - cally prohibited by law. The conditional use pro- cess for short-term rentals will ensure that neighboring farm- ers can weigh in on the activ- ity, Mulkey said. “The county was trying to subvert that, and it would have created a lot more headaches.” Beyond the disruptive eff ect of short-term rentals in farm zones, such businesses also create aff ordability prob- lems, he said. “It’s hard enough to buy farmland as it is,” he said. “It makes it even harder to buy a piece of farmland if it has a dwelling on it.” PLANT NUTRITION POWERS YIELD ISN’T IT TIME TO UPGRADE YOUR CROP’S POWER SOURCE? MAXIMIZING GENETIC POTENTIAL BEGINS WITH CHOOSING THE RIGHT POWER SOURCE FOR YOUR CROP. For over 50 years Stoller has been creating and refining proprietary plant technologies and nutrients to help optimize the potential of every plant. WE SPECIALIZE IN BULK BAGS! 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 HARVEST MORE ® UREA MATE LOCATIONS: Albany, Oregon (MAIN OFFICE) Ellensburg, Washington CONTACT INFORMATION: Phone: 855-928-3856 Fax: 541-497-6262 info@westernpackaging.com Optimum plant nutrition 1 product, 11 key nutrients Research-proven, positive yield response IF YOU'RE READY TO TAKE PLANT PERFORMANCE TO THE NEXT LEVEL YOU’RE READY FOR THE POWER OF STOLLER. ....................................................... CUSTOMER SERVICE IS OUR TOP PRIORITY! STOLLERUSA.COM w w w. w e s t e r n p a c k a g i n g. c o m S281009-1 S276666-1