A farming
legacy
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H&N photo by Andrew Mariman
Hank Cheyne and daughter Elizabeth, 10, are the
fifth and sixth generation in their lineage to
work the same farm in the Langell Valley. Cheyne
draws a living from haying in the area while his
parents have 60 head of beef cattle that graze
on three of the original pastures of the
homestead.
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Throughout the region,
farming is a family affair
By DD BIXBY
H&N Staff Writer
Their first year on the 160-acre
homestead, David and Frances Campbell cleared 22 acres
of sage and rabbit brush by hand, and then their grain
crop was devastated by rabbits.
That was in 1885.
Today, the Campbell homestead is a 480-acre farm with
thousands more of leased ground in great-great-grandson
Hank Cheyne’s operation. And what once took their
ancestors months, is now done in a week with advanced
technology that moves several hundred tons of hay in one
day.
Growing a farm
Charlie and Margaret Cheyne, current
owners of the 123-year-old farm, say the changes from
small to large, hand work to computerization, helped
them grow a century farm and keep on growing.
“There’s no way you could make it work on 160 acres
now,” Charlie Cheyne said.
Hank, the couple’s son, runs the operation and keeps it
up-to-date with GPS-guided tractors and 1,000-pound plus
hay bales.
Charlie remembered the 50- to 80-pound bales he used to
sell when he managed the farm.
“We called them suitcase bales,” he said, recalling a
term that aptly described the difference between bales
one person could easily buck onto a trailer and the
behemoth bales loaded with forklifts.
Size has changed the pace on the farm, too.
When Hank Cheyne was as old as his 10-year-old daughter,
Elizabeth, he took half a day to load a trailer. Now it
takes 30 minutes.
Annually, the farm grows and sells about 6,000 tons of
hay, mostly to California dairies in the Petaluma area.
“Things in ag have changed so much,” said Hank Cheyne.
“Machinery and size have changed — I farm what seven
people farmed 20 years ago.”
From Campbell to Cheyne
Charlie Cheyne also remembers the change from flood
irrigation to pivot point and wheel lines.
The farmland gets its irrigation from Gerber Reservoir,
built by Margaret Cheyne’s grandfather, Louie Gerber, in
the 1920s.
Margaret and Charlie Cheyne took the farm over from
Margaret’s father, Henry Gerber, in 1973 and still own
the cow/calf and hay operation. But they turned over
management of the operation to their son, Hank.
Charlie Cheyne, who’s in his 80s, still helps out, and
the couple runs about 60 head of cattle, downsized from
the 800- to 900-head herd Margaret’s father used to run.
Along with technology, management practices changed as
Margaret and Charlie Cheyne gave up on the open range
operation Henry Gerber ran and brought the cattle back
from BLM land.
The cattle never leave the farm and stay on the home
fields. They are fed with hay from the operation in the
winter.
Things will continue to change with the next generation,
too.
“Hank has free reign and he does things differently,”
said Charlie Cheyne.
Hank Cheyne, the fifth generation to work the Campbell
homestead, doesn’t work with the cattle, preferring hay
farming to livestock.
“Hank always wanted to farm and he’s good at it,” said
Margaret Cheyne, adding that plans to pass on the
homestead are already in the hands of attorneys. “Our
other son wanted nothing to do with the farm.”
Sesquicentennial pursuits
All the Cheynes said the key to the old homestead’s
longevity was its ability to adapt and evolve.
“You have to keep moving with the times, cause if you
don’t keep up you really fall behind,” Charlie Cheyne
said.
The next benchmark recognized by the Oregon Century Farm
and Ranch Program, which issues the century farm and
ranch status, is the 150-year, sesquicentennial award.
At 123 years already, the 150-year mark might bring
another name into the Campbell-Gerber-Cheyne mix.
Margaret Cheyne joked that a couple of farm boys already
think little Elizabeth Cheyne is swell.
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