8 CapitalPress.com Friday, June 3, 2022 Reed’s Dairy Reed’s Dairy store near Idaho Falls is a popular family stop. Reed’s Dairy: Serving customers in many ways By HEATH SMITH THOMAS For the Capital Press ORCHARDS, VINES, NUTS, HEMP, PASTURES, FARMS & MUCH MORE Biologically Correct Nutrients Work! “Chicken Soup for the Soil ® improves your soil by feeding the microbes and supplying all the nutrients most fertilizers neglect.” ± Improve Your Soil Health In 2022 ± Increase Yields & Quality Without Spending More Money ± Stronger, Healthier Plants & Trees With More Nutrition ± Allows Plants & Trees To Reach Maximum Genetic Potential ± Toxin Free, No Synthetics, No Animal Byproducts, Loaded With Nutrients! 64oz Jug 34 95* ACE O PL R! + Free Shipping!! T E TIM ORDE YOUR *Makes up to 128 gallons with 1 tablespoon per gallon. *COMMERCIAL QUANTITIES ALSO AVAILABLE. 888-394-4454 • www.DrJimZ.com IDAHO FALLS — Sev- eral generations of the Reed family have been supplying milk and dairy products to customers around Idaho Falls for many years and have now expanded to include a much larger region. Alan Reed’s great-grand- father moved to Idaho Falls from Iowa in 1910. Alan’s dad and uncles started the dairy in 1955, but the city grew around it. “My generation contin- ued the dairy until 1980 and then divided the operation. My uncle, Larry Reed, and I were partners in the dairy until he passed away. My brother, Bryon, grew the hay we fed and corn for silage,” Reed said. Milk from their 20-acre dairy farm was sold as bot- tled milk, ice cream and cheese. The Reeds have a processing plant and a dairy store at the farm. “We do milk home deliv- ery as well as taking milk and dairy products to grocery stores,” Reed said. For many years, surplus milk was sent to the Glanbia cheese plant in Blackfoot, Idaho, but as their customer base expanded they were able to utilize all their milk. Alan’s son, Sam, gradu- ated from Brigham Young University-Idaho with a busi- ness and fi nance degree and came back to the dairy. He is now the chief operating offi - cer and runs day-to-day oper- ations. Alan’s cousin, Mike Reed, is a partner, as is herds- man Refugio Cervantes. “We had a closed herd of Holsteins. Then in July 2021 we moved our 250 cows to a dairy in Terreton and inte- grated them with that herd. The dairyman milks them for us and we haul the milk back here for processing.” The cows are closer to the feed; a lot of good alfalfa hay is grown at Terreton, he said. It was time to move the cows; housing developments were getting too close to the dairy in Idaho Falls. “We’re building a new processing plant; we’ve out- grown the old one that was built in 1955,” he said. Reed’s Dairy ice cream and chocolate milk have a big following. They are sold to grocery stores and in their own store and milk routes. The original home deliv- ery route includes customers from Blackfoot to Rexburg. The dairy store in Idaho Falls is open Monday through Sat- urday. They also have a dairy store in Ammon and will open one in Twin Falls soon. A farm animal petting area next to the dairy store in Idaho Falls is open every summer, with a large grassy area for picnics. “We raise chickens that run around the place, and kids like to chase those.” The petting areas include baby calves, a pony, goats and sheep, baby pigs and other animals. “People come for ice cream, pet the animals and watch the cows,” he said. Six years ago Reed pur- chased a milk delivery com- pany in Boise. This gave him the opportunity to off er home delivery customers more foods produced locally in southern Idaho. “We’ve continued the home delivery service and wholesale into several gro- cery stores. We bottle the milk here and haul it to Boise,” Reed said. “We also have three dairy stores in the Treasure Valley — in Boise, Meridian and Kuna — selling ice cream, milk and cheese,” he said. “People enjoy being able to get fresh milk and dairy products locally.”