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About Applegater. (Jacksonville, OR) 2008-current | View Entire Issue (July 1, 2023)
Applegater Summer 2023 Grains of change: Farmers are reviving ancient and heritage grains in the Rogue Valley BY ANN NGUYEN The weekend before the spring equinox, local farmers, millers, and bakers gathered to break bread and celebrate the results of four years of hard work to revive, scale up, and grow rare and almost extinct heritage and ancient grains from all over the world. The gathering took place at Fry Family Farm in Medford, where farmers showcased bread made from the heritage grains they grew. Plates heaped with samples of fresh- milled sourdough-cultured breads were displayed next to individual bags of grains with names of each variety: Termoki wheat, Ladhaki wheat, Georgian Winter wheat, Rouge de Bordeaux wheat, Uli Hache rye, and so on. There were also cookies made with rye, sorghum, Tibetan purple barley, and amaranth, and cornbread from two maize varieties. As we sampled the breads, a team of bakers led by Jeremiah Thorndike Church (Boreal Heat), pulled out more freshly baked loaves from a wood-fired oven. It’s not often that I get to sample ancient grains, some more than 10,000 years old, grown right here in the Rogue Valley. The Rogue Valley Grains Project (RVGP) began four years ago when Chris Hardy, of Hardy Seeds, received more than 100 varieties of rare seeds in a partnership with the Rocky Mountain Seed Alliance and began to grow them in Ashland, along with seeds from his own collection. Some varieties had thousands of years’ ancestry. Emmer was domesticated as far back as 6300 BCE, with widespread cultivation in ancient Egypt around 5500 BCE. Hourani wheat was stored by King Herod 2,000 years ago. While preserving cultural heritage is itself a meaningful endeavor, the larger goal of RVGP is to grow its own climate- adapted grains. Heritage grains are known for their ability to increase soil carbon and other organic matter, which increase on-farm resilience and the soil’s capacity for holding water and nutrients. Heritage grains are also known for having greater nutrient density than modern varieties of conventional and organic grains. Chris enlisted a dozen growers from around the Rogue Valley, including Fry Family Farm, Shanti Acres, Eagle Mill Farm, Dunn Ranch, Feral Farm, and Wandering Fields, to grow the seeds and record the results. The trials for the first year were conducted at Hardy Seeds. Performance factors included climate adaptability, dry farming, disease and pest resistance, shattering, storage, and yield. Grower participants returned 15-20 percent of their yield back to the RVGP seed library. Ben Yohai, of Wandering Fields, in the Applegate, shared his trial results: “We trialed three barley varieties (Tibetan black, Himalayan, and Rinpoche), three wheat varieties (Alaska, Banatka, and Red Fife), and Spokane oats. They all performed well with minimal lodging. No irrigation was supplied with the exception of a couple of rounds of overhead in the late spring. Unfortunately, the ground squirrels harvested more than I did, so we primarily had the Tibetan Black barley and the Spokane oats yield an appreciable amount. I would trial them again with the intention of seeding at higher density and trapping for squirrels.” Scott McGuire, a grower in Wimer, spoke enthusiastically about Rouge de Bordeaux wheat. Although he did own locally grown organic heritage wheat. The project has been an intensive collaborative effort that takes many hands. The Organic Seed Alliance in Washington, along with Redwood Seeds in California, provided threshing equipment; Niedermeyer Farms supplied a grain combine; and Fry Family Baked goods ready for sampling by seeds of the type of Farm purchased a grain cleaner. grains used in their preparation. Photo: Ann Nguyen. The project still lacks facilities for drying large quantities of not irrigate the crops last year, they grains and storing the seeds. As the group gathered to hear Chris’s performed well. When asked to share his top five favorite update on the project, the hope and varieties, Chris replied, “Toulouse emmer, excitement were palpable. What if we grew which I love because it’s nutrient dense our own locally adapted grains? What if and is a hull-less variety, which is extremely we milled it here and produced our own rare. Black and tan einkorn, ditto.Termoki distinct Rogue Valley bread? Looking wheat, for its regenerative potential for around at the folks in attendance—farmers the soil and delicious versatility in the and gardeners, commercial bakers, millers, kitchen (especially pancakes!). Guatemalan food co-op owners, and local families from amaranth for its nutrition and drought all over the valley—all the ingredients tolerance, and the Rogue red quinoa we seem to be in place. RVGP has also been have been growing and selecting for more in contact with growers and millers in than 15 years, which is extremely tolerant nearby Scott Valley in California and the Umpqua Valley. of heat and can be dry farmed.” Interested in taking part in this The trial results have been promising enough that Fry Family Farm is scaling grassroots movement to grow nutritious, up from the two acres they planted drought-tolerant, soil-building heritage in fall 2021 to 100 acres of Rouge de grains in the Rogue Valley? You can Bordeaux wheat, Ukrainka wheat, and reach Chris Hardy directly at cmhardy@ Tibetan purple barley this fall. Fry hopes gmail.com. to soon provide the valley with our Ann Nguyen • anguyen1130@gmail.com Come visit! Serving breakfast, lunch and dinner. Beer and wine on tap or to go. Family-run Now serving burgers! 21 Open 7 am - 7 pm Weds - Sat and 7 am - 3 pm Sun. Closed Mon and Tues. 181 Upper Applegate Road Jacksonville, OR 97530 541-702-2662 JUST SOLD! 11411 Highway 238, Applegate 27.5-acre Riverfront Property with Irrigation Home ■ Barn ■ Outbuildings Listed for $1,175,000 ● WE DELIVER ● YOU LOAD ● WE PICK UP Yep, it’s that easy! MOVING • REMODELING • STORING HOME STAGING • RESTORATION Looking for a better way to store your items? Call us to learn more and get a free quote! Serving Josephine & Jackson counties 541.659.1800 ● GoMinisSouthernOregon.com ► Use PROMO CODE AG10 for $10.00 off initial delivery. ◄ We’ve been selling Applegate properties for over 19 years. 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