2 CapitalPress.com Friday, June 3, 2022 Harrold’s Dairy: Family continues farming tradition Max, as a partner in 2014 and hasn’t looked back. Harrold’s Dairy milks 450 to 500 cows CRESWELL, Ore. — When Bobbi Harrold daily and grows most of its own feed on about Frost went off to college to earn her animal sci- 1,200 acres in Creswell, Ore. They are one of ence degree, her folks hoped that she’d become only three dairies in Lane County. a nutritionist or take another job in the Frost is currently board vice chair industry — anything but farming. of the Oregon Dairy Farmers Associ- ation and enjoys getting to know fel- “They understood how hard it is to low dairy farmers around the state and really make your living on a farm, but lobbying on their behalf on issues that farming is just the only thing I’ve ever matter to the industry. She said most really wanted to do,” Frost said. of their job is educating the public and One day she was talking to a sales- man visiting the dairy who shared that the legislature about dairies and their he’d been in a similar situation, but Bobbi Frost practices. Ag overtime, water, animal that by the time he was old enough to welfare and manure management are join the family farm it was out of business. He among the issues they frequently address. encouraged her to follow her heart. Working with ODFA requires time away “He told me that I could get a job in the from the dairy, but Bobbi says she gets lots of industry and see animals every day but that it help from her family. would never be the same as having my own “Every generation of the family that has farm,” Frost said. “I realized that I wanted to come before me has prioritized being active in see my own cows every day and I am extremely our community and in the industry,” Frost said. fortunate that my grandparents, parents and “My grandparents and parents all do what- everybody did such a good job that there was a ever they can to help me with my kids and my responsibilities on the farm; I absolutely farm left for me to come back to.” Frost graduated in 2011, joined her father, couldn’t do it without them.” By BRENNA WIEGAND For the Capital Press S221093-1 Royal Riverside Farm: ‘We love our animals’ By GEOFF PARKS For the Capital Press ALBANY, Ore. — Ben and Amy Krahn’s dairy encompasses only 5 acres and 20 milking cows, but the cou- ple has always had big dreams for the lifestyle it could pro- vide for them and their two ag-centric daughters. Situated on Riverside Road and nestled in the lush farmland of the Willamette Valley southwest of Albany, Royal Riverside Farm comes by its regal name purposely. Amy and both of her daugh- ters are past and current tiara-wearers of the state dairy industry’s promotional pro- grams, such as the Oregon Dairy Princess Ambassador program and similar contests. Amy was the Oregon State Princess Ambassador in 1996 (as Amy Poole) and Gracie, 20, is the current State Prin- cess Ambassador — the first mother-daughter title-hold- ers in the program’s 62-year history. Clancey, 17, cur- rently reigns as the program’s Linn-Benton County repre- sentative, so next year possi- bly could see a Krahn fam- ily trifecta if she, too, is crowned the State Princess Ambassador. The daughters raise the family’s mostly Jersey herd, the basis of which are nation- al-award winning cows they say are, appropriately, “pam- pered like princesses.” Ben, 48, claims fifth-gen- eration status as a dairyman while Amy, 47, is the third generation of her family to work in the industry. Ben grew up on a dairy in Wisconsin with Holsteins, while Amy’s roots are on a Hood River dairy farm, work- ing with Jerseys. “He was managing the OSU Dairy and I was teach- ing at Linn Benton Commu- nity College when we got Geoff Parks/For the Capital Press The Krahn family outside their dairy barn near Albany, Ore. Left to right: Amy, Clancey, Gracie and Ben. together,” Amy said. “We both had this big heart and a dream but we couldn’t afford anything.” But they were commit- ted to teaching their daugh- ters the same life skills that they grew up with, she said, “a lifestyle that instills faith, family and farm values (through) hard work, dedica- tion and commitment.” They purchased the Albany acreage and house at auction in 2010, all four of them work- ing together with that lifestyle commitment in front of them. By 2018, they had built a barn for the cows with an adjacent milking parlor and old-style glass bottling line where they process 650 gal- lons of creamline — pasteur- ized but un-homogenized — milk each week. They deliver that product to 50 stores around the state, as far away as Bend and Portland. “There’s not a lot of dairies where there are people doing the milking, doing the bot- tling and doing the distribu- tion,” Amy said. In June of 2021, in a nod to the ongoing pandemic and in a further effort to maxi- mize the return from their small operation, the family converted a small shed at the front of their property into the Classy Cow Farmstand. There, they sell drive-up customers half-gallon and individual-sized bottles of their cream line and chocolate milk as well as meat products from their herd of hogs and fresh fruits and produce from Amy’s parents’ farm in Hood River. Their good husbandry prac- tices have rewarded them with exceptional cows providing high-quality milk, Amy said. That, and the family’s pas- sion for the show ring. “We don’t just have milk quality, we have really pretty cows, show cows,” Clancey said, “and we are nationally known for being good show- men. As much as we are in the milk business, we’re market- ing also, because we want that genetic superiority.” “We said we can’t just feed our milk to our pigs, we need to recoup some of the costs of its production,” she said. “One of the dreams of our par- ents was to channel our grand- parents’ ways, and that’s what really founded the idea of put- ting the milk into bottles.” “At the end of the day, we love our animals.”