County, Azure Farms reach agreement on weed control
Sherman County, Ore., commissioners and Azure Farms agreed to a weed control plan that may settle a dispute that pitted the organic operation and its supporters against conventional wheat growers who don’t want weeds spreading into their crops.
The farm near Moro in the north-central part of the state agreed to control weeds, with “control” defined as “little or no noxious weed seed production that would affect neighboring fields” and spread by the wind. Conventional farmers are chiefly concerned about seeds from Rush Skeleton, Canada thistle, White top, Diffuse napweed and Morning Glory, or Bindweed.
The agreement allows Azure Farms to use any method it sees fit, while the county’s weed district staff has the right to monitor Azure’s fields, pastures and range ground for compliance. County employees can access the fields by permission and appointment only, and must be accompanied by Azure Farms staff, according to the agreement.
If a weed patch is in more than 50 percent flower production, Azure Farms will have seven days or a “mutually agreed upon reasonable amount of time” to take action. If it doesn’t, Sherman County can spot-spray the weeds and mark the area in hopes the farm can maintain organic certification.
“This looks fine,” farm manager Nathan Stelzer said in a late-night email following a June 21 meeting with the county court. “Thanks for the good interactive communication and discussion today. I think we can have a very good working relationship, now that we know each other better and have a clearer understanding of the meaning of ‘control.’”
Commissioner Tom McCoy said he’s optimistic the farm, its neighbors and the county have reached an agreement that will work for all three.
That wasn’t the case earlier this spring. The farm’s weeds have been an irritant to other farmers for several years, especially those who grow certified wheat seed. This year, the weeds were described as “rampant.”
Sherman County officials warned Azure they would ask the state Department of Agriculture to quarantine the farm, and said they would spray weeds with herbicide if the farm didn’t get a handle on the problem.
But using conventional week killers would cause Azure to lose organic certification for three years after the last application.
Azure Farms appealed to its fans and followers on social media, and county officials received an estimated 59,000 emails critical of their stance on the issue.
At a county court meeting in May, held in a high school gym to accommodate the crowd, residents said they were angry about being vilified on Facebook and called names by people they’d never met. Nathan Stelzer and his brother, David, who is president of Azure Standard in nearby Dufur, apologized for the social media outburst.