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October 20, 2005
Klamath Falls Herald and News
By DYLAN DARLING
H&N Staff Writer
Onions are in.
Growers of the flavorful bulb are bringing in their
harvest around the Klamath Basin and reports are it's been a decent season.
“This year isn't too bad,” said Scott Seus, who grows onions south of
Tulelake. “We could have used another two weeks of growing time at the start
of the season.”
Those two weeks were washed away by heavy spring rains around the Basin that
muddied the fields, making planting tough.
Wet weather returned this month when growers are digging onions out of the
ground, but the sprinklings have been light and haven't impeded harvest too
much.
“It hasn't stopped us,” Seus said. “Things are drying out, and we are
getting going with it pretty heavy now.”
And it hasn't rained in most parts of the Basin since the weekend.
“Conditions are getting better every day the sun keeps shining,” Seus said.
Basin onions are some of the last to come out of the ground in California
and Oregon, and most aren't headed for a supermarket shelf or a restaurant's
kitchen.
Instead they are shipped to dehydration plants in Central California or
Nevada. There they are made into onion powder and onion flakes.
The plants send trucks up to the Basin, fill them with onions and haul them
the hundreds of miles to be dehydrated.
Dan Chin, who grows onions on both sides of the
California-Oregon border near Merrill, said when the dehydration plant
managers want Basin onions depends on when they get onions from southern and
central California.
This year there were some problems with onions around Bakersfield, Calif., so
the plants want Basin onions earlier than usual.
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The October moisture has created dirt clouts that can
end up in the trucks with the onions, Seus said. The plant managers don't want
to pay to haul dirt so they have rules about how much dirt they will accept
with each load.
As a result, onion pickers move slower over the fields, taking time to
separate out dirt clouts. Seus said the slower harvest adds to the cost of
growing onions.
Although this year's onion growing season started late
and is ending a bit early, Chin said a good summer made up for it.
“Overall, we had a good growing season for potatoes and onions,” he said.
But growers have said the yields are somewhat down
because of the late start, said Harry Carlson, director and farm advisor at
the University of California's research center in Tulelake.
“A couple of weeks can make a significant difference,” Carlson said.
Exact numbers about this year's harvest were not available.
Estimates from growers are that there are about 2,000 acres of onions in the
Basin.
On average, the fields yield about 25 tons per acre, Chin said.
Growers said this year has been not quite as good as last year, when many had
a great growing season.
Any predictions for next year's harvest?
“Ehh, you don't know,” Chin said. “Every year brings a different
deal.”
Source: http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2005/10/20/news/agriculture/ag1.txt