AG DAY WEDNESDAY March 25, 2020 KEEPING IT IN THE FAMILY ‘The best horse in the barn has a name, and his name is Try.’ By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Spring is Chad Holliday’s favor- ite time of year. For baseball fans, it’s spring training. For high school or col- lege students, it’s spring break. For Chad Holliday, a third-generation rancher, it’s calving season. Chad is the eldest son of Ron Holliday, the patriarch of Windy Point Cattle Company, who died in October. Chad said his father taught he and his sisters Mandy and Tonna how to run the day-to-day opera- tions of the ranch. Tonna said the three of them work well together, and while los- ing their father was — and still is See Family, Page B2 The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Billy Radinovich feeds a calf with a milk bottle at the Windy Point Cat- tle Company. Radinovich, a sopho- more, has been helping out at the ranch during the school closure. Contributed photo Tonna Holliday feeds the herd at sundown at the Windy Point Cattle Company. F inding value in the resources available John Day’s city greenhouse trying new agricultural practices By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle B arren land and vile waste- water seem irredeemable at first, but the John Day city greenhouse gives those resources a new purpose. The idea for a greenhouse came before John Day City Man- ager Nick Green worked for the city. When Green was getting ready for his interview for the city manager position in March 2016, he researched past city coun- cil minutes and realized that the wastewater treatment project had been a 10-year adventure with no treatment plant built. When Green researched options for the treatment plant, he came across a team called Sus- tainable Water from Virginia, and they created a hydroponic reuse facility in Atlanta, Georgia, at Emory University called the WaterHub. The university was generat- The Eagle/Rudy Diaz Eagle file photo Tomatoes are also grown alongside the various greens. Butterhead lettuce that is about ready to harvest and package at the John Day green- house. ing a lot of grey water running down sinks in dorms from daily use. The volume of water gener- ated from campus per day is about equivalent to the city of John Day, according to Green. The univer- sity generated a 100% reuse sys- tem that recycled the water and put it back into irrigation and non-potable uses. Green saw this idea and said, if this is possible on a college cam- pus, then it can be done for a city. “It was a brilliant idea from the university, and it showcases a very green technology in the way you treat wastewater,” Green said. “I took their approach one step further and said, ‘Rather than using plants to treat wastewater, why not use wastewater to grow plants for human consumption.’” The city has about 120 million gallons a year in waste, which gets treated and then dumped into the ground, Green said. The treat- ment plant will give a new use for wastewater in the greenhouse. “The idea behind the green- house was can we use it to restart See Greenhouse, Page B3 The Eagle/Rudy Diaz The John Day Greenhouse stands tall as it continues to provide more produce to the community.