A8 News wallowa.com March 1, 2017 Wallowa County Chieftain A DIFFERENT KIND OF FARMER By Sean Ellis Capital Press Wallowa County HEALTH LINE 519 W. North Street, Enterprise 541.426.3413 Mon-Thurs 9 to Noon/1-5pm; Fri. 9-1 Keycode Entry Weight Room • Cardio Women’s Circuit • Tanning 202 W. Main, Enterprise 541-426-0313 Specializing in Anti-Aging Skin Therapy Customized Facials Waxing Services, Brow Sculpting Body Polish-Back Facials High-Perfomance Products 541-398-0759 | Located @ beecrowbee 01 Main Joseph Gambling Problem? Area in detail 95 ADAMS VALLEY 55 WASHINGTON 95 Eagle, Idaho 84 PAYETTE GEM BOISE 21 Boise Nampa ke ADA Riv 95 OWYHEE N er Teaching about ag Visitors can see most of southwestern Idaho’s Trea- sure Valley from the highest spot on Twin Oaks Farms. Smith also believes he has a responsibility to use his farm to teach urban residents of the valley about agriculture and the value of hard work. Originally from Ohio, Smith, who lives on the farm with his wife, Toni, came to Idaho when he was 19 and has been involved in farming his entire life. He grew up know- ing the value of hard work and how important farming is to society but fears most Ameri- cans have now lost touch with those concepts. He tries to reach people at an early age and employs a couple dozen youngsters on his farm each year. He starts by teaching them how to plant pumpkins in a straight line with no machin- ery, so they appreciate mod- ern farm equipment. The oldest kid drills a hole with a stick, the next one drops the seed into the hole and “the next one, usually the (youngest) because he’s clos- est to the ground, pats the seed into the ground.” He said that whether or not they go into farming, “if noth- ing else, (they’ll) appreciate production agriculture.” The kids get paid depend- ing on how much they pro- duce. “The problem in America is that we’re teaching our kids a ‘D-Day’ on the farm One unlikely event takes place each summer on the farm. Every June, to com- memorate the D-Day landing during World War II, Smith uses a large mound of earth on his farm to re-enact the day American and allied troops invaded German-occupied France. The re-enactment involves hundreds of paint ball guns. Anyone 50 and over is a “Ger- man” and stationed at the top Submitted photo Competitors in the Tater Dash Mud Run at Twin Oaks Farms in Eagle, Idaho, dig into a world record serving of french fries in 2014. The record involved 1,003 pounds of french fries made from 1,256 pounds of raw potatoes cooked in 110 gallons of cooking oil. Sn EAGLE, Idaho — Jeff Smith’s Twin Oaks Farms are about so much more than just making money. It’s also about benefi ting wildlife, youth development, educating the public about ag- riculture and, often, sheer fun. Smith grows crops such as pumpkins, sweet corn, clover hay, corn for silage, sunfl ow- ers and Idaho’s famous pota- toes. He also raises livestock on his 200 acres. But this is not your aver- age farm. For Smith, providing hab- itat for wild- life comes fi rst, followed by teaching Treasure Val- ley residents about agricul- ture. It’s also Smith about youth development — and setting world records. Making a living and hav- ing a blast in the process are all part of life on the Eagle, Idaho, farm. of the hill while any partici- pant under 50 is an “Ameri- can” and has to try to take the hill. When an American is hit, he goes back to the bottom of the hill and starts over. When a German is hit, he’s out. The action doesn’t stop un- til the hill is taken, no matter how long it takes. For the battle, Smith, 55, ordered a custom-built, fully automatic World War II-era German replica paint ball ma- chine gun. It can shoot 300 rounds a minute. The battle rages for hours, and about 60,000 paint balls are fi red before the hill is tak- en, said Smith, whose father fought on Utah Beach during the historic assault. “They have to take the fl ag. There’s no backing down,” he said. “The war will not end until the battle’s over.” That experience gives par- ticipants a small appreciation for what American troops en- dured during the D-Day land- ings, he said. “We will never again expe- rience ... the horror and terror that those great men experi- enced, what kind of courage it took to keep running into those bullets,” he said. “After getting shot for four hours by a paint ball gun, you’re going to survive but, holy smokes, do you have an appreciation for (what those men went through).” “At the same time, we have a frickin’ blast,” he added. Ore. Idaho Cultivating knowledge about ag and history produces bumper crop of fun 78 Capital Press graphic how to be collectors, and that doesn’t work,” he said. “You always have to be a producer. Once they fi gure out that they get paid more based on how much they produce, they are on their way to being produc- ers and it will never end from there.” He also introduces the youngsters to some of the many advanced career oppor- tunities involved with farm- ing and reminds them, “(J.R.) Simplot was our fi rst billion- aire in the state and he was all agriculture.” Races and festivals Smith holds annual events such as the Tater Dash Mud Run, which takes participants on a zig-zag course around the entire farm, and Hallow- een Land, a corn maze and harvest festival to attract as many people as he can to his farm and give them a taste of agriculture. “My goal is to get every kid and mom and dad on the farm. At least to touch it, smell and taste it,” Smith said. “That means they’re not sit- ting in front of a television or texting. They’re out being real humans.” The Halloween Land event includes a “bunny hill” that involves a large mound of dirt covered with straw and 50 bunnies being chased by doz- ens of excited youngsters. Wendell Livengood, 74, a retired farmer, lives in a trail- er on Smith’s property and takes care of a lot of Twin Oaks’ farming-related tasks in the same 1946 tractor that he bought when he was 12 years old. He said it’s the best retire- ment he could ever dream of, and he appreciates Smith’s emphasis on teaching peo- ple about agriculture and old-fashioned hard work. “Everything we do out here I feel is part of the Unit- ed States growing up,” he said. “We need to bring back some of the old into the new generation.” Setting records Several years ago, while organizing the annual Tater Dash footrace, Smith learned from one of his employees that the Guinness world re- cords for the largest serving of french fries, mashed pota- toes and baked potatoes were all held by groups in other countries. Idaho is the potato state and those records belong here, he told his employees, and they set about researching how they could bring the re- cords to Idaho. They used the Tater Dash, which attracts about 1,300 people, as the setting for at- tempting the world records. In 2014 they set the french fry world record and just missed setting the mashed po- tato record in 2015. A plaque from Guinness recognizing the french fry record hangs in his offi ce. The record was 1,003 pounds of french fries made from 1,256 pounds of raw pota- toes cooked in 110 gallons of cooking oil. “We’re going to train hard- er and try (for the mashed po- tato record) again next year,” Smith said. “The following year, we’ll go after baked po- tatoes.” “That’s great,” Idaho Po- tato Commission member Randy Hardy said of Smith’s potato world record efforts. “Idaho is the potato king around the world and it’s only right that we should have those records.” The commission donates potato sack bags, potato pins and potato recipe handouts for the event and hands out Tater Dash promotion materi- al during the IPC’s annual Fa- mous Idaho Potato Marathon. Wildlife fi rst For all his focus on teach- ing about farming, Smith said wildlife come fi rst on his farm and every inch of it is de- signed to benefi t them. For example, he’ll mow only one strip of hay at a time so the remaining crop pro- vides cover for ground-dwell- ing birds during nesting sea- son. He also created “Logh- enge,” a play on the famous English Stonehenge land- mark, by placing ancient, dead trees in the same layout. Each tree also provides dens for wildlife. He has also planted thou- sands of trees as habitat for wildlife. As a result of his efforts to make his farm wildlife friend- ly, it is a home to mule deer, elk, coyotes, foxes, weasels, badgers, skunks, water fowl and other birds. “The entire agricultural portion of (the farm) is de- signed for wildlife habitat,” Smith said. “The two can ab- solutely be done together.” MARCH SAVINGS: 10% Savings enterprisevet.com 541.426.3331 PLUS $10 coupon from WCHS Come in Feb 15-March 15 to enter for a free spay or neuter BARGAINS MONTH of the While supplies last. 4 99 YOUR CHOICE 20-Lb. Wild Bird Food L 501 272 1 10-Lb. 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