Seaside hosts third Grow the Coast conference
SEASIDE, Ore. — Farmers, ranchers and those interested in making a living in agriculture made it clear they reject the idea that the Oregon Coast is the wrong place to put down roots.
“The presence of all these farms show that it’s patently untrue that ‘You can’t grow anything here on the coast,’” said Emily Fanjoy, owner of Peace Crops farm in Nehalem, in introducing the keynote panel of the third Grow the Coast at the Seaside Civic and Convention Center Saturday.
The theme was heard repeatedly during the convention as presenters discussed topics ranging from weed management and cost accounting to winter vegetable production and seed saving.
Farmers can grow many crops on the coast, said Teresa Retzlaff of 46 North Farm in Olney. She was one of three keynote panelists.
“There’s no can’t about it,” she said. “It’s about the choices we make.”
Laura Swanson, manager of the Manzanita Farmers’ Market, spoke about the proliferation of farmers’ markets on the North Coast. Nine markets cooperate on days and hours of operation, she said.
It’s an arrangement that’s worked out well. All the markets seem to be growing, and travelers like the market option.
“One question always asked is, ‘Where are other farmers markets,’” she said.
For farmers, the markets offer a stepping stone to getting their products into grocery stores and other markets, she added.
Clatsop County Commissioner Dirk Rohne, owner of Brownsmead Island Farm, said when he was in high school, people were uninterested in farming.
“Now it’s ‘Napoleon Dynamite’ cool,” he said.
In the same way the craft beer industry has taken off, locally grown food can also find a bigger place in communities, he said.
Suggestions on financing a farm included loans through a traditional lender or innovative funding through crowdsourcing.
Michelle Dragoo, a U.S. Forest Service biologist from Tillamook, was there just to check out the possibilities,
“It’s something I would love to do” she said.
She considering buying a vegetable farm or an orchard. She’s thinking about a place where she could have poultry or livestock and room for processing value-added products.
It would depend on the land available, she said.
All these issues came up during discussions. It’s not just buying the land, said Suzanne Hayes, farm loan officer for the USDA Farm Service Agency. Zoning issues can affect what you can and can’t do on your land. It’s important to check with county officials before making plans, she said.
The coastal farm can produce income by bringing tourists to the table, but there’s a load of red tape involved.
Scottie Jones, co-owner of Leaping Lamb Farm in Alsea and founder of Farm Stay USA, shared her experiences in making her working farm a place for city slickers to get back to nature.
Zoning, regulations and neighbors play a role in agritourism, she said. Talk to the neighbors first, she emphasized.
“The neighbors can put a kink in the works,” she said. “If you have bad relations with the neighbors before you start a farm stay, do you really think this is going to make it better?”
A backyard poultry operation may sound like a great business, but better check city or county officials to make sure you can do it, said James Hermes, OSU Extention poultry specialist.
Hermes went over some of the specifics of the number of poultry and the age of the birds that often get small producers in trouble with local authorities.
He also gave an overview of the types of chickens and turkeys that do best in coops and free range. He explained that the fast-producing Cornish cross, the common chicken found on dinner tables today, owes its existence to a small-scale farmer.
“It was created by a small farmer like yourself selecting for those traits,” he said.
The session on tasty poultry traits broke just in time for lunch.
While others addressed coastal weed problems and crop health, Marc Bates gave a crash course in cheesemaking.
While Tillamook County dominates the cheesemaking industry, there’s been a proliferation of cheese producers, he said. In Oregon there were five or fewer in 1999. That number had climbed to 10 in 2005. In Washington there were nine in 1999 and 29 in 2009.
He expects to see a facility in Clatsop County sometime soon.
“It’s a question of when,” he said.
He cautioned that the craft cheese industry is unlikely to balloon like the craft beer industry because of stricter regulations and higher startup costs.
Nellie McAdams of the Friends of Family Farmers, said, “There’s a sea change in farming on the coast.”
More people, including young people, are beginning to farm. It’s an exciting time for farming locally and nationally, she said.
“They’re looking at it as a lifestyle and a viable business.” Grow the Coast, sponsored by Oregon State University, the Oregon Food Bank, The Daily Astorian, the Oregon Department of Agriculture, Meyer Memorial Trust and CenturyLink, drew between 225 and 250 participants, organizers said.