The Oregonian, Portland, OR., May 28, 1939; Farm, Home and Garden Section,
page 5
Includes portrait
ASPARAGUS SOLD AT FANCY PRICE
Early Market Buyers Favor Bingen-Grown Stock
By Al McCready
Staff Writer, The Oregonian
Use plenty of fertilizer and sell nothing but first-grade
produce - these are two of the main points John W. Dickey credits for his
success in growing vegetables in the mid-Columbia area.
Dickey's 126-acre farm is located at Bingen, Wash., just
opposite Hood River. The rich, river-bottom soil and the mild climate combine
to make this area ideal for raising garden produce.
Farming is really a full-time job for Dickey, for besides
supervising the growing and harvesting of his crops, he makes the 126-mile
round trip to Portland nearly every morning to bring his vegetables to the
farmers' early wholesale market.
Asparagus is Dickey's principal crop in the spring. His
own brand of grass is famed locally for its high quality, and regularly sells
five to ten cents higher than the going market price. Although his annual
asparagus production is about 6000 crates, Dickey is unable to keep up with
the demand and is often sold out for days in advance.
Lake Covers Fields
Dickey started farming in 1921. He now has 22 acres planted
with asparagus. The rising water of the new Bonneville lake has covered an
equal acreage of what was formerly his best asparagus land. To prevent further
encroachment by the river during flood season, he recently completed 1½
miles of dike.
Most of the acreage on the Dickey farm is devoted to
raising tomatoes. About 70,000 boxes are marketed yearly. He is one of the
few growers whose tomatoes are graded and sorted by machinery.
Other major crops grown on the ranch are cucumbers, fall
head lettuce, cabbage, eggplant, peppers and summer squash. Although Dickey
owns a fleet of trucks which he operates under the name of the North Bank
Truck line, he considers himself a farmer and devotes much of his time to
agriculture.
Much Fertilizer Used
Asparagus plants are perennials and thus do not require
replanting every year, but Dickey says continual care is needed to keep the
roots in good condition. This year he spread 27 tons of commercial fertilizer,
besides large quantities of manure, on his fields.
Young asparagus plants are first seeded in beds. After
growing unmolested for a year, they are taken up and sorted. The best roots
are then planted in the fields in 5-foot rows, 3 feet apart.
Three years are required before the asparagus is ready
for harvesting. The peak of production is not reached until the eighth or
ninth year. Some of Dickey's asparagus plants are 40 years old.
Frequent Cutting Practiced
During very warm weather asparagus stocks will grow as
much as 6 inches a day. Since No. 1 quality asparagus is supposed to be about
10 inches long, twice-a-day harvesting is then necessary to prevent waste.
Asparagus harvesters work with long butcher knives. The
stocks are cut one at a time just below the surface of the soil. The work
usually starts before daylight and is rushed to completion before the hot
sun has a chance to strike the plants, as asparagus keeps longer if cut while
cool.
After harvesting the stocks are carried to the packing
house to the graded, bunched, weighed and crated in 30-pound boxes.
[HOME]
© Jeffrey L. Elmer