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About Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 1994-current | View Entire Issue (April 15, 2020)
BUSINESS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 2020 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A7 COVID-19 affect on nursery industry is a mixed bag By KATHY ANEY STAFF WRITER COVID-19 is motivating people to pick up a trowel and get gardening. Maybe it’s worry about empty grocery shelves or boredom during quarantine, but many plant nurseries and seed companies say business is booming. “We’re super busy,” said Tania Hoeft, manager of Kopacz Nursery & Floral in Hermiston. “We’re busier than we usually are and a lot of people are calling to fi nd out if we’re open.” The nursery ran low on tomatoes and is selling soil and compost at an unprece- dented clip. Many custom- ers are fi rst-timers. “They haven’t gardened in the past or they are start- ing back up,” Hoeft said. The gardening boom is reminiscent of World War I and World War II when peo- ple planted victory gardens to prepare for wartime food shortages. John Borchert, owner of Victorian Gardens in Mil- ton-Freewater, said he is noticing the same. “Everyone is home gar- dening,” Borchert said. “We’ve had a steady trickle of customers.” Gov. Kate Brown’s exec- utive order on March 20 to temporarily close certain businesses didn’t mention nurseries. However, even essential businesses must enforce physical distancing in accordance with Oregon Health Authority guidelines. “We’re limiting shopping to eight people at a time and making sure they’re spread out,” Borchert said. Newbie gardeners are looking for guidance. More than 15,000 people regis- tered for the Oregon State University Extension Ser- vice vegetable gardening course the week after OSU announced it would waive the usual $45 fee. “Currently, we have over Staff photo by Ben Lonergan Rossy Garcia plants Roma tomato starts into larger containers in preparation for their sale at Kopacz Nursery & Florist in Hermiston on Tuesday morning. Staff photo by Ben Lonergan 28,000 enrolled,” said horti- culture professor Gail Lang- ellotto, who coordinates the state’s master gardener pro- gram. “We normally get about 20 people who sign up for the course in a normal year.” Territorial Seed, of Cot- tage Grove, experienced such a surge in orders that the CEO wrote an open let- ter telling customers the company would accept no new orders for approxi- mately two weeks. “The COVID-19 pan- demic has created an unprecedented demand for our seed products,” wrote Tom Johns. “Many Ameri- cans are cocooning at home — understandably moti- vated to be self-reliant for as much of their own fresh food as possible.” The Cottage Grove store- front closed and some of the staff reassigned to help fi ll existing orders. “My wife, Julie, and I have been in the seed busi- ness for 35 years and have never experienced anything A shopper wearing a mask stops to check her plants while shopping at Kopacz Nursery & Florist in Hermiston on Tuesday morning. Staff photo by Ben Lonergan Kopacz Nursery & Florist manager Tania Hoeft waters sprouts in a greenhouse at the nursery in Hermiston on Tuesday morning. Rows of plants sit in the greenhouses at Kopacz Nursery & Florist in Hermiston on Tuesday morning. comparable to this,” Johns wrote. Not all parts of the nurs- ery industry, the second big- gest agricultural sector in Oregon, are experiencing the surge. “It’s a mixed bag,” said Jeff Stone, executive direc- tor of the Oregon Associ- ation of Nurseries. While some nurseries are going a roughly six-week period. The Oregon nursery industry ships about 75% of its stock out of state. Some growers who rely on geographically distant customers are expe- riencing curtailed orders just before peak shipping time. “There’s no good time for a pandemic,” Stone said, “but timing could not have been worse. It is make-or- gangbusters, he said, others are struggling. Because of economic uncertainty, retail- ers are ordering fewer orna- mentals and fl owers. In addi- tion, the pandemic brought a fl urry of canceled events, such as weddings. In the nursery business, Stone said, timing is every- thing. As much as 70% of the year’s income comes in Staff photo by Ben Lonergan break time.” Borchert and other local nursery owners are enjoying a surge in gardening, but he worries about Mother’s Day and all those hanging bas- kets he and his staff planted for the yearly celebration. “People are defi nitely gardening,” he said, “but I’m not sure how the gift market will be.” AN AMAZING GIFT FOR AN AMAZING 65+ years young? MOTHER’S DAY IS MAY 10! $34.95 $44.95 plus shipping offer expires May 10, 2020 Hardcover book • $10 off • Limited supply You’re at higher risk. If you’re 65 or older, you are at higher risk of getting very sick from the coronavirus. You must take extra care of yourself. Stay home if you can. 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