Friday, March 4, 2022 CapitalPress.com 7 Derek Schafer: Growing wheat seed in Washington By HEATHER SMITH THOMAS For the Capital Press RITZVILLE, Wash. — This family farm was home- steaded in 1889 by Derek Schafer’s great-great-grand- father, about the time many Volga German families came to the area. Derek and his wife, Susan, do the farming now, with some help from their two children who are cur- rently both in college. Their son, Devin, is a sophomore at the University of Idaho studying ag business, and their daughter, Linnea, is a freshman at Northwest Uni- versity in Kirkland, Wash., with a business major. “This illustrates the impor- tance of business in agricul- ture today,” Derek said. Farming is no longer as simple as it used to be, and a person has to be a good busi- ness manager to make it work. “Both our kids realize this, and I think they are interested in being part of this farm in the future. As they get older we will work on a family suc- cession plan and accommo- date them if they want to be here,” Derek said. The farm grows wheat, dry peas and canola. “This is the heart of dry- land wheat country, and over the past 10 years we’ve also introduced dry peas and canola as rotation crops with wheat,” he said, adding that rotations help keep the ground fertile. “The rotations also break plant disease cycles and we can clean up weeds that are hard to get rid of if the land is just in wheat/fallow rotation,” he explains. “By alternat- ing with broad-leaf crops, we can mix up our weed control strategies and also get another Courtesy of Derek Schafer From left, Derek Schafer with Linnea, Devin and Susan. break between wheat crops. This improves the purity of the seed we grow, by having a rotation crop in between.” Derek has been back on the farm for 24 years and says switching to no-till and add- ing crop rotation is one of the most exciting things they’ve done. For many decades, most farmers just grew a sin- gle crop, which depletes the soil, especially when plow- ing and leaving ground fal- low, with soil exposed. This tends to kill the soil biology and microbes that are crucial to soil health. “Conservation farming and crop rotations are work- ing, and improving our soils, and we are seeing the results,” Derek said. The farm has been grow- ing wheat seed for about 20 years. “We worked with local seed companies to grow seed for them because we had clean fi elds and took extra care with maintaining purity — cleaning our machinery and doing all the things nec- essary to be able to deliver a good product,” he said. Wheat seed is the primary crop on the farm, though recently they’ve also grown some dry pea seed. “We’ve grown wheat seed for fi ve diff erent companies. They contract the seed a year at a time, one variety at a time. We may grow diff erent variet- ies in diff erent fi elds, but for each contract it’s a specifi c variety,” he explained. “The contract requires fi eld certifi cation, and seed purity certifi cation. It must be weed-free so we have to make sure our fi elds meet all the standards,” he said. Being dryland crops, the drought this past year made it more challenging. “We were still able to make a crop, maybe because of the health of our soil and the fact we went into winter with mois- ture. Most of our wheat is seeded in the fall as winter wheat, and the fall of 2020 was moist enough that the crop went into winter in good condition and had a great start, but the summer of 2021 was brutal.” The farm harvested 70% of a normal crop. “With 50% rainfall, we felt that a 70% crop was very good, considering every- thing,” Derek said. ALFALFA GRASS CORN Best Prices on Irrigation Supplies SEEDS All Alfalfa - Non G.M.O. GRASS SEED - All Non G.M.O. As Low As $2.59/lb. or $129.50/Bag Starting at $40/Bag (Annual Ryegrass) (DY-HARD CTR Heavy coatd for dryland farming) Later Orchardgrass - Elephant Orchardgrass - Pawnee Orchardgrass - Fawn Tall Fescue Tug of War PI (non-coated) $3.59/lb. or $179.50/Bag - Super Arid Tall Fescue - Johnston Festolium - Tug of War CTD (coated) $2.99/lb. Medium Red Clover - Teff - Shoshone Sainfoin or $149.50/Bag - Top Hat Timothy - Ray’s Perennial Ryegrass - Tug of War X-Treme PI (non-coated) $3.69 Italian Ryegrass - Sorghum/Sudan Grass CALL FOR PRICING or $184.50/Bag Sprinklers • Rain Guns Drip Tape • Dripline • Filters • Poly Hose Lay Flat Hose • Micro • Valves • Air Vents Fertilizer Injectors ...and much more! Tug of War X-Treme CTD (coated) $$3.09/lb. CORN or $154.50/Bag Round-Up Ready $199/Bag The Creeper CTD Grazing Alfalfa Triple Stack $229-$249/Bag $2.99/lb or $149.50/Bag Hybrid Grain $79-119/Bag Hybrid Silage $79-$119/Bag Fast & Free Shipping from Oregon 10% OFF 1-844-259-0640 PROMO CODE: CAP10 www.irrigationking.com S280822-1 SEE OUR FLYER IN THIS WEEK’S PAPER (800)910-4101 | www.tugofwarseeds.com | email: sales@tugofwarseeds.com S282003-1