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Picking mint at its peak
Tulelake
distiller helps determine best
time to harvest
BY JILL AHO
H&N Staff Writer
June 11, 2009
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H&N photo by Jill
Aho -
Don Kirby, the
superintendent at
the Intermountain
Research and
Extension Center in
Tulelake, inspects
mint plants growing
inside a greenhouse
at the center
gathered from local
farmers. He is
studying the optimal
time to harvest
mint. |
The
still at the University of
California Intermountain
Research and Extension Center in
Tulelake is quiet. Tiny mint
plants dot the soil in the field
and scent the air in the
greenhouse.
But in a few months,
the miniature mint distiller the
research station purchased with
the help of area farmers will
help extension center
Superintendent Don Kirby with
his ongoing project. Kirby is
trying to determine the best
time for farmers to harvest
their mint crops, to maximize
both quality and yield.
“We’re getting real
close to having that conversion
factor,” Kirby said. “Growers
are still trying to find the
optimum time to harvest.”
Kirby visits farmers’
fields about three weeks before
they intend to harvest and
begins sampling. He then takes
his samples back to the mint
distiller to extract the mint
oil. His goal is to give
producers an idea of what is
going
on in their fields.
“This is a very
educated group of growers and
aggressive growers, and you have
to stay on your toes to stay
ahead of them,” Kirby said.
The extension center
focuses its research on crops
grown in the Klamath Basin and
tries to find solutions to
problems area farmers are
experiencing in the field.
Most Basin mint
growers raise Black Mitcham, so
that’s what the research center
is growing, too. It also has a
small amount of B-90, Kirby
said.
Kirby’s experiment in
mint distillation is about five
years old, he said.
“Maturity varies from
field to field,” he said. Based on the type and amounts of
fertilizer and water regimen of
the individual farmer, each mint
crop is unique.
Mint grows well in the
Basin, but as more acres are
dedicated, more problems have
arisen. Intermountain Research
Extension Center Farm Adviser
Rob Wilson said about 4,000
acres are growing in northeast
California, 2,500 of those in
the Basin.
Fluctuations in winter
temperatures, which create
alternate freezing and thawing
conditions in the soil, have
caused problems with mint crops.
As the plants’ roots are exposed
to the winter air, they become
susceptible to frost, Kirby
said.
“It’s been a problem
where we’ve lost a lot of
stand,” Kirby said. Once mint is
planted, it acts as a perennial,
coming back year after year.
Stand refers to the recurring
plants.
Mint also has some
serious pest problems, including
mites and root borers, which the
station is also researching.
But the appeal of the
mint grown in the Basin is
undeniable.
“I’m pretty sure it’s
the high desert, the cold
nights,” Kirby said. “Our oil is
high quality. It’s some of the
best.”
And Kirby’s work will
help the Basin keep that
reputation and ensure our
toothpastes, chewing gum and
mouthwashes continue to taste
minty-fresh.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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17 U.S.C. section 107, any
copyrighted
material herein is distributed
without profit or payment to
those who have
expressed a prior interest in
receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational
purposes only. For more
information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
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