Coast River Business Journal FEATURE STORY As kids, Dan Bogh and his three siblings would help with the production. “Every season, we were out in the bogs, which is a family tradition,” Dan Bogh said. “This farm became available about five years ago, so we purchased this one. And so it’s just a natural flow into this and this is just kind of our little hobby.” You don’t have to be family to come help out in the bog. Some curious people driving down Dellmoor Loop will stop by to check out the red watery fields in the fall. “I will say ‘no, no looky loos, you must bring your hip boots’ and they’ll say ‘do you have a pair? I’d love to get in,’” Trinda Bogh said with a laugh. “So we make a lot of friends out here.” The Boghs grow seven different varieties of cranberries across their 25 acres and 11 bogs. Trinda Bogh said she loves to see the development of different cranberry varieties over the years, as the industry comes out with bigger, redder berries. Bi-state collaboration While the other Oregon bogs are further south in the Bandon area, the farms in Gearhart are grouped in with the closer cranberry farms in the Long Beach Peninsula. Once the Boghs load the cranberries into a truck, they deliver them to get rated, processed and cleaned at the Ocean Spray plant in Long Beach. “The Washington folks have been so inviting from the very start five years ago, they just wanted to see us succeed,” Trinda Bogh said. “If we have any questions or need a piece of equipment or anything, all we have to do is pick up the phone and they’re here. They’re great people to work with.” From the Long Beach facility, the cranberries make their way in trucks to a plant in Hillsboro, where most of them get frozen. Because of the deep red color of the cranberries that grow in the West Coast, the majority of Bogh Farm berries become juice or craisins. “We have actually been to the Ocean Spray bottling plant on the West Coast, it’s in Henderson, Nevada, and we watched the process of all the different juices being bottled,” Trinda Bogh said. “It’s quite a process.” Ocean Spray is owned by about 700 farmers, with each farm averaging 18 acres. Trinda and Dan Bogh at their farm in October.  Industry challenges But the cranberry industry does not come without its challenges. The U.S. has been experiencing a cranberry surplus for years. “Well, anytime, especially in the agricultural business, when you have a surplus, your prices are going to go down,” Dan Bogh said. “So that’s what’s happened with the farmers, that’s what we’ve been going through.” Trinda Bogh said over the years, cranberry prices have run the gamut from 10 cents per barrel up to $60 per barrel. “The market really fluctuates,” she said. “We’re no different than fishermen or foresters, we depend on good old Mother Nature and folks who drink cranberry juice.” However, the surplus has led to innovation for different ways to bring the cranberries to market. Ocean Spray has gone beyond cranberry sauce and juice to products like chocolate-covered craisins and even cranberry dog food. “That’s another good thing about Ocean Spray, too, is they are constantly trying to find new avenues,” Dan Bogh said. Watch the video of the cranberry harvest at crbizjournal.com The Bogh family loads the cranberries into a truck in October.  November 2020 • 7