A6 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 2022 Trenary: ‘It’s just so amazing that so many people love and care about me’ Continued from Page A1 Through Kingfi sher Farms, he spent the follow- ing decades cultivating the organic farming industry of the region, mentoring young farmers and sharing his knowledge. The farm is best known for its high-quality salads, deliv- ered to restaurants and hotels. His produce even made it out to the James Beard House restaurant in New York City. Despite physically drain- ing radiation treatments and losing his home to a fi re last July, his daughter said Tre- nary was largely private about his hardships. “He didn’t want people to worry about him, and so he’d always tell people, ‘I’m doing pretty good. I t’s getting bet- ter. I’m about to get better,’” Wild said. He still talked about returning to Norway, where he once spent three years doing a boat-building apprenticeship. An old surfboard serves as his headstone Family and friends buried Trenary on his farm, wrapped in a Pendleton blanket inside a wooden box built by his son, Clinton Johnson. They sur- rounded his body with moss, sweet grass and fl owers along with photos of his life surfi ng, traveling and raising his three children: Mercedes Trenary, Wild and Johnson. It wasn’t his fi rst choice of burial — which was to go out in a blazing pile of cedar wood — because at-home cremations aren’t legal in Oregon. But Wild said she’s glad he returned to the E arth without any chemicals in his body. An old surfboard serves as his headstone. Trenary almost sin- gle-handedly transformed the property he was laid to rest in. In the early years of the farm, he would drop his kids off at Fire Mountain School in Arch Cape and tend to the earth until it was time to pick them back up. A few weeks after his Lydia Ely/The Astorian Brian O’Dea opens the gate to enter a greenhouse at Kingfi sher Farms. death, neighbor Larry Smieja leaned out of the open door of his truck, cigarette burning between his fi ngers, to talk with Brian O’Dea, the new owner of Kingfi sher Farms. They laughed, recall- ing that when Trenary fi rst bought the property he opted to clear the blackberries crawling across the pasture by ramming a $200 truck into them repeatedly. They imag- ined the berries fl ying left and right, brambles breaking. “He had fun with it,” O’Dea said. “Jeff loved to have fun. He was a great surfer. He was loved by so many people, all the clients, anyone from the farmers mar- ket, neighbors, the restaurants and hotels in Portland and along the coast. He was a leg- end in his own right.” Trenary drove into a lot of things head on, including business. “He was not the easiest person. He was really stub- born, and his way was the only way. But that also cre- ated space for him in the world to walk his own super unique path. And nobody could tell him what to do or how to do it. He had his own timing and his own process,” Wild said. Chef John Newman, the owner of Newmans at 988 in Cannon Beach, was Trenary’s best friend. Trenary provided pro- duce for Newman’s restau- rant. He summarized Trena- ry’s approach to sales as, “I got the food, and you want it.” “He liked being treated like the celebrity farmer,” Newman said, and laughed. “That was his jam.” Newman met Trenary in 1998 during a produce delivery and they grew close through philosophical discus- sions and a mutual love of food. He said the best thing about Trenary was he took people at their word, not their appearance or status. “He decided that it was his responsibility to grow food and provide it,” Newman said. “And that’s inspiring to me.” Newman said he appreci- ated Trenary’s commitment to the community. H e hopes young farmers understand that the industry is about more than making money. A costly fi re Last July, Trenary sat in a chair outside his home and watched it burn. He lost nearly everything, including personal items from raising his children, and walked out SHELTER SALE at the Pacific Grange Saturday, March 12 with only his phone, fl ip fl ops and a P endleton shirt. After that happened, the community gave back. “I’ll go to the grocery store and I’ll try to pay them and they just tell me to leave,” Trenary told T he Astorian last August. “I go to my car and just sit there and cry because it’s just so amazing that so many people love and care about me.” A GoFundMe for recovery raised nearly $50,000, with comments from longtime customers and friends thank- ing Trenary for his work. At that point, Trenary was already facing his cancer diagnosis. “We spent a lot of time together in his last year. I would take him to appoint- ments and things for his health, and try to recoup things from his loss with his house. Because he really had nothing after that,” O’Dea said. Wild said she consid- ers O’Dea, his wife, Maurie, and their two sons, Shane and Damian, to be family. Trenary had previously sold O’Dea half of the property, wanting to pass it on to someone he knew. “Brian stepped up, like no problem. He just imme- Lucy Wild Jeff Trenary died of cancer in February. diately started treating my dad like his dad, and caring for him like his dad. And that was incredibly selfl ess and really amazing,” Wild said. “And it made me realize how much he loved my dad, and I can’t think of a better per- son to carry on the Kingfi sher name.” Kingfi sher Farms is prep- ping for the spring. Under a greenhouse and behind a wire fence to keep out deer, an employee har- vests turnips and radishes, gloves caked in soil. Rows of green leaves fi ll the space that smells like E arth, onions and basil. O’Dea said he will con- tinue to grow produce for the farm’s iconic salads, and hopes to continue the pop- ular Community Supported Agriculture boxes. They’ll be focusing on bringing food to local markets in Asto- ria, Manzanita and Cannon Beach, and maintaining cli- ents such as Fresh Foods and the Astoria Co+ op. He’ll be supplying Wild’s personal produce, too. “I just want the commu- nity to know that Kingfi sher Farms is rockin’, and that Brian is committed to carry- ing on Jeff ’s legacy and that the incredible bounty of pro- duce will continue coming,” Wild said. O’Dea hopes to expand on what Trenary created, too. He wants to introduce new varieties of crops and build a walk-in freezer to save the blackberries still growing on the land. He intends to plant more native species along the river. He wants to build a home and a shop on the property. For the time being, O’Dea is focusing on the invasive Japanese k notweed, more dif- fi cult to manage as an organic farm. Trenary left him tips for that, too. “He is just such a good soul, and loved by so many,” O’Dea said. “I feel really blessed to be the steward of his land now.” HERITAGE SQUARE HOUSING OPEN HOUSE CASA ABIERTA VIVIENDA DE HERITAGE SQUARE Shasta, Nutmeg and Maddie invite you to Clatsop Animal Assistance’s sale to benefit the county animal shelter. It takes place this Saturday, March 12th from 9:00 to 3:00 at the Pacific Grange located at 90475 US 101 in Warrenton. CAA volunteers will be selling a wide variety of beds, toys, collars, leashes, kennels, clothes, treats and much more. And talk about feeling good about shopping - ALL proceeds go to help the dogs and cats at the shelter. Please join us for an informative and engaging discussion about the current state of the Heritage Square redevelopment project. We look forward to hearing your feedback and questions. Astoria Armory 1636 Exchange Street, Astoria Open House 1: March 14, 2022, 4:30 - 7:30PM Open House 2: March 24, 2022, 4:30 - 7:30PM Únase a nosotros para una discusión informativa y atractiva sobre el estado actual del proyecto de reurbanización de Heritage Square. Esperamos escuchar sus comentarios y preguntas. Astoria Armory 1636 Exchange Street, Astoria Casa Abierta 1: 14 de marzo de 2022, 4:30 - 7:30PM Casa Abierta 2: 24 de marzo de 2022, 4:30 - 7:30PM Follow us on Hosted by the City of Astoria and the Edlen & Co. team Organizado por la ciudad de Astoria y el equipo Edlen & Co.