C8 The BulleTin • Sunday, May 23, 2021 Mother bins help cut harvest times, increase profits BY BEN LONERGAN East Oregonian PENDLETON — Towering over a field at Jones & Jones Ranch outside of Pendleton, the 58-foot-long and nearly 13-foot-tall mother bin dwarfed its at- tached tractor during a recent field day demonstration hosted by Walkabout Mother Bins and FEI Inc. “The idea of the mother bin is to constantly keep your combines and your grain carts running and your trucks running,” said Crystal Kopecky, director of sales at Walkabout Mother Bins. Based in Faulkton, South Dakota, Walkabout Mother Bins has been pio- neering the concept of the mother bin in the United States since its start sev- eral years ago. While new to the U.S., the concept of the mother bin has been around in Australia since at least the early 1980s, said Kopecky. Born out of labor shortages, the colossal piece of farm equipment helped cut down on harvest times and save money by cre- ating a site for temporary storage of grain prior to transport away from the field. “This allows you to keep up if you’re not keeping up,” Kopecky said. “But if your operation is keeping up it will al- low you to reduce your trucks and la- bor needs.” With a capacity of more than 4,000 bushels, the mother bin sits on the edge of the field and acts as a tem- porary storage facility for grain to pick up slack between combines and semitrucks hauling grain to storage. Combines fill bankout wagons, which in turn fill the mother bin for holding until it can be transported. From there a 22-inch auger can load a semitruck in mere minutes. “Equipment nowadays, especially your combines, they’re built bigger and they’re built to operate faster,” Kopecky said. “Over time, as these combines have increased their capacity and their ability to combine faster, the only thing that hasn’t changed is how we haul it away.” Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Keegan Jones’ Walkabout Mother Bin sits on display during a field day at Jones & Jones Ranch near Pendleton on May 12. For Keegan Jones, of Jones & Jones Ranch, the mother bin did just that. Jones, who received a mother bin from Walkabout 10 days into his roughly 40-day harvest last year, saw the hefty piece of equipment cut nearly three days off of his harvest. “We were about halfway through our harvest when we received the mother bin and we were able to just add it right into our system,” he said. “It was like adding another combine. It really picked up the slack because of the extra surge capacity.” Jones said he estimates his two-com- bine harvest usually costs about $10,000 a day, so the savings amounted to nearly $30,000 in the first year alone. “So you’re basically spending $10,000 a day to keep your crew and everything going — combines and all that stuff rolling,” he said. “So if you have some of that sitting or if you shave off some time, then you have some savings.” That time was saved by allowing combines to run almost constantly. Jones said the field-side storage solu- tion allowed him to harvest later in the evening and have a supply of grain ready for trucks to transport first thing in the morning. Continued from C1 The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate, accord- ing to the Oregon Employ- ment Department, was 6.6% in March, down from 6.8% in February, but still higher than it was pre-pandemic when the Deschutes County unemploy- ment rate was 3.3%. On Friday, Deschutes County moved into the lower risk category, which allowed for more dining-in and fitness capacity and more social gath- ering. The county achieved 65% vaccination rate among those 16 and older, a level set by of Gov. Kate Brown. If the growth continues, Duy said, the forecast for the economy is rosy in the months ahead, particularly if the num- ber of vaccinated residents continues to climb. “The tourism and travel sec- tor did recover, clearly people have flocked to the area and that reflects the outdoor ame- nities,” Duy said. “We’ve been coming out of this (recession) economically for a while, now it’s more light at the end of the tunnel. “We haven’t recovered all the losses yet, but the index does show the economy is growing.” e e “It just kind of streamlined the whole operation,” he said. “The main thing is to not shut down those com- bines.” FEI Inc., which is based in Yakima, Washington, and is the regional dis- tributor for Walkabout Mother Bins, has sold two of the bins to operations in the Pacific Northwest, one going to Jones and the other near Helix, accord- ing to Bill Nice, the Pacific Northwest territory manager for FEI Inc. “It’s a fairly affordable thing when you think about how much more ef- ficient it makes your combine,” Jones said. 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