2 CapitalPress.com Friday, February 11, 2022 People & Places Farmer has big success with tiny greens By JULIA HOLLISTER For the Capital Press Established 1928 FORESTVILLE, Calif. — Corie Brooks raises tiny crops on a tiny farm. For nearly three decades, she has grown sprouts and micro- greens on 1 acre. She says that sometimes the definitions of the two are blurred. “Sprouts are the first leaves the seeds produce,” she said. “Microgreens are the first true leaves produced next.” Growing sprouts and microgreens is no easy task. “Some sprouts and microgreens are harder than others to grow,” Brooks said. “Each one has different tricks.” Brooks, a food scientist, opened Brooks and Daugh- ters 28 years ago. Today she lives on 5 acres and farms just under 1 acre with five greenhouses on it. The farm sells 80% of the sprouts it grows to con- sumers at the CUESA Ferry Plaza Farmers’ Market in San Francisco and the farm- ers market in Berkeley. One of the hardest things — in addition to getting them to grow — is get- ting them to reach market- ability at the right time, she said. Tracking the weather is essential. Brooks & Daughters farm never uses pesticides, herbicides or commercial fertilizer and uses only water and organic compost on the sprouts. The health benefits are Capital Press Managers Western Innovator CORIE BROOKS Home: Forestville, Calif. Occupation: Farmer Education: San Francisco State University, bachelor of food science Family: Two daughters, Geneva and Lindsay Corie Brooks opened Brooks and Daughters 28 years ago. Today she farms just under 1 acre with five greenhouses. many. The tiny plants have concentrated amounts of most of the vitamins and minerals humans need. Studies also show that microgreens have 8-10 times the vitamins and min- erals by weight compared to the adult plant. An ounce of wheatgrass juice is the equivalent of eating 1 1/2 pounds of vegetables. Also, the flavor is con- centrated, she said. The farm starts all its sprouts in buckets of water outdoors. Next, they are transferred to specially designed racks under a large shaded structure. As the seeds sprout, they are planted in soil or in 17-by-17-inch open-bottom nursery flats and moved into greenhouses. The sprouts and micro- greens then grow for one to four weeks in the green- houses before they are ready for market. “Corie Brooks had a background in food sci- ence before taking over the farm,” said Lulu Meyer, CUESA’s director of operations. “She grows more than 30 varieties of sprouts and microgreens on the farm, rotating them throughout the year and feeds what she doesn’t sell to her small but very happy chicken flock.” There have been some downturns in the sprout market due to COVID pandemic. The business had a “horrendous” 2020 because 60% of its sales are to restaurants, which also generally had an awful year, Brooks said. Retail sales were down, too. 2021 was better and things seem to be improv- ing now despite omicron. “She takes a lot of pride in growing specialty micro- greens for chefs in the Bay Area, which is very evident if you ever visit her at the Saturday Ferry Plaza Farm- ers Market,” Meyer said. “Her stand is often the first stop for chefs as they line up for a shot of her wheatgrass to power them through their market shopping.” Quote: “The business is all women though not intentionally, but it works for us,” Brooks said. “We enjoy growing and sell- ing clean, fresh healthy food at our wonderful Ferry Plaza Farmers Mar- ket. It is the best market with the best customers.” David King, a long-time officer with both the Oregon Hay & Forage Association and the Klamath Basin Hay Growers Association, lost his battle with cancer and died Jan. 26. King, 62, had been a hay grower in the Malin, Ore., area since returning to Klam- ath County after graduat- ing from Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo in California with an ag business degree in 1982. The King farm grows alfalfa, grass, timothy and triticale hay and grain. The farm was a member of the High Moun- tain Hay Growers Coopera- tive that marketed and sold the hay products. King was a founding member of the state hay asso- ciation. He was both a long- time secretary of the state organization and president of the Klamath Basin hay association. “David put a lot of hours into both organi- David King zations, try- ing to make them better, to make them work,” said Mylen Bohle, the recently retired Oregon State University Extension hay and forage specialist for Central Oregon. “He saw the value of the two organizations.” King had planned to par- ticipate in an evening zoom meeting of the state associa- tion on the day he died. “David’s whole love was farming,” said Robin King, his wife of 40 years. “He enjoyed the satisfac- tion of seeing things grow. He believed in the market- ing part of the business and that’s why he was also a believer in the hay grower associations. He believed you could move forward as a group better than as an individual.” King was first diagnosed with leukemia in 1998. In 1999, he had a bone marrow transplant with his daugh- ter Whitney being the donor. Six years ago, he had surgery to remove cancerous cells and then last year another surgery. Robin King and their son Cameron will continue to work the family operation. The couple’s two daughters are also involved in agricul- ture. Angelina King works for the Tulelake Irrigation District and Whitney Cantrell is an accountant for Macy’s Flying Service and also does bookkeeping for the family’s farm operation. David and Robin King each have long family his- tories in the Klamath Basin. Robin’s great-grandparents came to the area in the early 1900s. David’s father, Frank King, got a homestead in the Malin area as a vet- eran in 1949. That home- stead property is still part of the family operation with the land being used to graze cattle. David King was known as an innovator, trying new ways to benefit the soil and to conserve water. He was will- ing to share what worked best for his farming operation. “He wanted to promote education as much as possi- ble,” Robin King said of her husband. “He worked hard every day to do it right and to produce a high-quality prod- uct. That was important to him. “It was also important to him that people got the right facts and perspective so they would better understand agri- culture,” she added. Brooks adds that neither of her daughters — Geneva and Lindsay — is involved in the business. “When my oldest went into the Peace Corps they asked her what she wanted to do. She said, ‘Anything but agriculture!’ Grow- ing up they did help with the business and I believe the close-up look at the amount of hard work, involved in farming, was enlightening.” Laurence Bagg, another Malin area hay grower, described King as efficient, creative and progressive. Bagg said King laser-lev- eled several fields to make them more efficient for flood irrigating. Scott Pierson, a Sil- ver Lake, Ore., hay grower, agreed that King was “extremely innovative.” “But he was also inter- active,” Pierson said. “You could ask him questions, but then he wanted to know more about your operation, your soil and water issues. “He was a serious repre- sentative for the ag industry,” Pierson added. “He could be a professional among suits or easily talk to a person who was just getting into the industry.” Bohle said King is “a real loss to his family, the Klamath Basin and to the Oregon Hay and Forage group.” Longtime Spokane Ag Show site manager receives excellence award By MATTHEW WEAVER Capital Press SPOKANE — Brad Hoyt, a longtime volunteer site manager for the Spokane Ag Show, received the Excellence in Agriculture award Feb. 1. Hoyt’s humility was evident in accepting the award. “I feel like there’s a lot of farm- ers and people that deserve it more than me,” he said. “I appreciate the honor of having it, but there’s a lot of really good farming, technology and things going on that I think deserve the award also.” Tim Cobb, chairman of the award committee, highlighted Hoyt’s mil- itary service and professional career helping people invest and prepare for the future. “He has continu- ally shown his com- mitment to the agri- culture committee and to Spokane Ag Show,” Cobb said. Brad Hoyt “Personally, I can say that (he) is one who can be relied on to complete any task, large or small. His dedication has made the ag show the success it is today.” Hoyt grew up on a 400-acre cat- tle, alfalfa and timber farm near Post Falls, Idaho. Back then, a tractor took “about a week” to plow a 100-acre field, he remembered. “The first day, if you got three rounds, you were feeling like you were really rolling,” he said. He thought the tractor then had a “huge tire,” he remembered. “Some of these tractors have the front tires as big as (our tire) in the back,” he said. “As the machinery got bigger and the laws got stricter, people didn’t want to drive down the road to get to 100 acres. It wasn’t big enough.” Hoyt retired about four years ago after nearly 38 years as a financial adviser. He’s been working on home projects since then, including a shop house at his home in Priest Lake, Idaho, for the last year and a half. Hoyt has volunteered at the ag show since 1983, wanting to help the community he was working with. “I like helping the farming econ- omy, they’ve been undervalued,” he said. “Everything that comes from the store comes from an ag business.” Preparation for the ag show begins mid-summer. In December and Jan- uary, Hoyt goes over the schedule to coordinate with exhibitors about what machinery they’re bringing. Move-in begins the Wednesday before the show, with the major- ity of the large equipment coming in Sunday. Volunteering for the show is one way Hoyt feels he’s able to give back to farmers. He admires how they’re always willing to step up to help someone in need. “The farming community has always been that way; it was when I was little,” he said. “You helped the neighbors if you could help the neighbors, even if you only just put in your muscle. That still is there.” CALENDAR Submit upcoming ag-related events on www.capitalpress.com or by email to newsroom@capital- press.com. THROUGH SATURDAY FEB. 12 Organic Seed Growers Con- ference: Oregon State Univer- sity Campus. The Organic Seed Growers Conference is the larg- est event focused solely on organic seed in North Amer- ica, bringing together hun- dreds of farmers, plant breed- ers, researchers, certifiers, food companies, seed companies, and others from across the U.S. and around the world. Farm tours and short courses are held prior to the full two-day confer- ence. Website: https://seedalli- ance.org/ FRIDAY FEB. 18 PNWCTA Christmas Tree Short Course: 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Sheraton Portland Airport Hotel, 8235 NE Air- port Way, Portland, Ore. The Short Course’s primary focus is education. To succeed in producing and selling quality Christmas trees takes more than just planting seedlings. It takes commitment to continually hone your skills, add to your knowledge base and use the tools of your trade in the most effective and efficient manner possible. Website: https:// bit.ly/3gAmk17 FRIDAY-SATURDAY FEB. 18-19 Oregon State University Small Farms Conference (online): Everything you ever wanted to know about succeeding as a small- scale farmer. Website: https://bit. ly/3IA8jx9 THURSDAY FEB. 24 Virtual classes for pes- ticide applicators (online): 8 a.m.-noon. There will be vir- tual classes for pesticide appli- cators’ recertification, offered by Oregon OSHA and the Ore- gon Farm Bureau Health & Safety Committee. The virtual training will provide continu- ing education credits for any pesticide applicator licensed in Oregon. Participants will receive pesticide recertifica- tion CORE credits to maintain an applicator’s license. The four CORE credit hours provided are approved by the Oregon Dept. of Agriculture’s “Worker Protec- tion Standard: What You Should Know.” Website: http://www.Ore- gonFB.org/pesticideclass THURSDAY-FRIDAY FEB. 24-25 USDA Agricultural Out- look Forum (virtual): The forum will include more than 30 break- out sessions on climate, inno- vation, trade, commodity out- looks and supply chains. Website: https://www.usda.gov/oce/ ag-outlook-forum TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY MARCH 8-9 Oregon Wine Symposium 2022: Oregon Convention Cen- ter, 777 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., Portland. 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The group was incorrectly reported as trying to rally support for a dam in a Page 1 story on Feb. 4. The Capital Press regrets the error. 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.