SALEM, Ore. (AP) — Wet winters and cool, dry summers make Oregon's Willamette Valley one of the best places on the globe to produce seeds for organic broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts and a variety of other vegetables known as brassicas.
That means the fields south of Portland are also an ideal place to grow canola, another brassica whose seeds can be pressed to extract oil for food or renewable fuel.
But you won't find any canola here. It was banned from the Willamette Valley to protect the delicate vegetable seeds from being contaminated by pollen from canola or destroyed by the pests and diseases it brings.
Demand for renewable energy, however, has helped fuel a push to grow canola in the region, raising a tense conflict between producers of organic foods and renewable energy in a state that cherishes both.
Seed farmers fear canola would cross-pollinate with their plants, destroying the value of the pure seeds they produce. They're joined in their fight by organic-food lovers, small-farm advocates and opponents of genetically modified crops.
"This is an existential threat," said Frank Morton, who farms about 12 acres of specialty seeds in Philomath, about 90 miles southwest of Portland. "If canola comes here, it's the beginning of the end of this industry."
Canola proponents say Morton and his colleagues are overreacting. With the right controls, they argue, Canola can co-exist without harming other brassicas. Some wheat and grass-seed farmers are eager to use canola as a rotational crop to interrupt disease and pest cycles. They used to burn their fields at the end of the season, but recent pollution controls have severely limited that option.
"It comes down to good stewardship and cooperating with your neighbors and good management practices," said Kathy Hadley, who grows grass seed and other crops in the Salem area. "Everyone does those things on a regular basis already, and I feel like, in this specific case, things are being blown out of proportion."
The state Department of Agriculture has proposed loosening the ban on growing canola in the Willamette Valley, reducing the exclusion zone from 3.7 million acres to 1.7 million, with some restrictions.
The agriculture agency will hold a public hearing Friday to hear from fired-up advocates on both sides of the fight. The agency director is expected to make a final decision by the end of the year.
"They can grow this stuff anywhere else," said George Kimbrell, a lawyer from the Center for Food Safety representing specialty seed farmers. "It's just this one area that's being protected for many very good reasons. It's not like Oregon or anywhere else is saying you can't grow your canola. It's one area."
Specialty seed farmers grow vegetables not for the food but for their seeds. They're shipped to farmers around the world, especially in Asia and Europe where there's higher demand for foods that aren't genetically modified. This region produces nearly all of the world's European cabbage, Brussels sprouts, rutabaga and turnip seeds, according to a 2010 study by Oregon State University.
Canola, by contrast, is uncommon in Oregon, where farmers planted just 6,500 acres of it this year, most of it in Eastern Oregon, across a mountain range from the brassica seed fields.
Archive: Saturday
Fight: Biofuels vs. organics
Cross contamination from growing canola at heart of conflict
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Traverse City West students launch weather balloon
A weather balloon launched by students at West Senior High School demonstrated a core principle of physics. What goes up must come down.
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Letters to the Editor: 05/25/2013
Appearance enhanced; Must act together.
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Ag Forum: It's imperative to help bees
During spring in the fruit business, our thoughts always turn to pollination.
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Traverse City skier schusses to Utah
Rowmark, one of the premier ski programs in the United States, is getting one of Traverse City’s top skiers in Madison Ostergren, who has been accepted to compete with the prestigious academy and attend Rowland Hall College Prep School in Utah beginning this summer.
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Beach Bums beat Rockford Aviators, 4-3
It doesn't matter that the Beach Bums' bats didn't exactly break out of their little early-season slump.
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31st annual Bayshore Marathon today
Races: Marathon starts at 7:15 a.m.; half marathon begins at 7:30 a.m.; 10K starts at 7:30 a.m.; all races begin at College Drive and finish on the Traverse City Central High School track.
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Teen job outlook better in 2013
The pressure is on for Brooke Stocking to find her first summer job. The Traverse City teen, 16, is on two cheer teams and will compete this summer in Virginia Beach.
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Body & Soul in Brief: 05/25/2013
Rhubarb Social; Yoga weekend; Alpha class; and more.
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Farm Focus in Brief: 05/25/2013
Farmland leases; Rose-growing basics.
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Grand Traverse student heads to national spelling bee
Eighth-grader Charlie Donahue remembers his first spelling bee, way back in third grade. He was over-confident then, and a “very easy” word bounced him from the competition.
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Four pets safe in house fire
Grand Traverse Metro Fire Department crews responded to a fire Thursday at 2:10 p.m. in the 4500 block of Buckhorn Drive.
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Health Newsmakers: 05/25/2013
Rachel L. Estabrook has been named executive director of fund development at West Shore Medical Center in Manistee, where she also will serve as executive director of the West Shore Healthcare Foundation and as staff liaison for the hospital’s auxiliary.
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Prep Sports Roundup: TC West clinches BNC title
Traverse City West clinched the Big North Conference championship with a Friday sweep of Alpena, marking the first time in school history the Titans have put up an undefeated BNC baseball slate. (Plus more)
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Record numbers audition for 'Les Misérables'
Old Town Playhouse added a fourth audition for the musical Les Misérables after a record number of people showed up to try out.
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Sports in Brief: 05/25/2013
TC West football camp slated; TC Central football camps set; Shrift named to NHCA all-academic. (Plus more)
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Area Blood Drives: 05/25/2013
Upcoming blood drives across northern Michigan:
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Two charged for making meth at local motel
Two people face criminal charges stemming from a meth lab discovered at Shadowland Motel.
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Education Newsmakers: 05/25/2013
The following area students were named on the Dean’s List at West Shore Community College for the 2012 fall semester:
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Annual Rhubarb Social in Bear Lake
Kick off summer vacation with an annual rhubarb social at the Bear Lake Christian Church.
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Frontier League Standings: 05/25/2013
Frontier League baseball at a glance:
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Today in Sports: 05/25/2013
What's happening in sports across the region and the country:
Continued ... - Poll: Does gov't owe public explanation on phone records?
- Saturday, May 18, 2013
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Beach Bums lose, 5-2
Goose Kallunki drove in three runs Friday night as Joliet beat the Traverse City Beach Bums 5-2 in a Frontier League season opener.
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Ag Forum: Chestnuts a growing market
Various species of chestnut are found in Michigan — naturally in the landscape, in green spaces as ornamentals and also planted in orchards for nut production.
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Priest uses big rig to make special deliveries
Father Ray Cotter delivers more than sermons. Two weeks ago, the former truck truck driver turned priest drove a semi-tractor-trailer rig to Bolling Air Force Base in Washington, D.C., to pick up 1,164 free military computers for use in Michigan Catholic schools in the dioceses of Lansing, Saginaw, Gaylord and Marquette.
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Traverse City West students launch weather balloon



