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Mint farmer looks abroad
by Ty Beaver,
Herald and News July 20, 2006
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Basin grower finds new niche overseas with undistilled mint
leaves
The
air was heavy with the aroma of peppermint as combines swept
up and down fields of cut mint. When it’s the right shade of
green, Tulelake farmer Scott Seus knows he has a good crop.
“I
tell them I’m sending $100 bills,” he said.
H&N photos by Todd E. Swenson
Seus Farms owner Scott Seus grows mint in
Tulelake which he sells to a company in Germany that makes mint
tea. |
Seus and his
men worked last week getting the first cutting done and to its buyer. But
unlike most mint growers in the Basin who distill their crop into oil,
Seus isn’t sending his mint to a distillery.
Instead, this
first cutting of mint will go to a German company and made into mint tea.
The rigors and demands of conforming to the regulations necessary of an
international market and an uncommon crop can be trying, but are worth it
in the end, Seus said.
Mint became a
more common sight in the Basin after it was first grown in the mid-1990s.
Today, Rich Roseberg with the Klamath Experiment Station said there are an
estimated 2,000 to 3,000 acres of cultivated mint in the Basin
with a dozen growers and three oil distilleries.
Seus started growing mint for tea five years ago. Fuel costs made it
less profitable to produce oil and he looked for another market. He has
350 to 400 acres of cultivated mint this year.
“It’s been good for us. We’re able to fit a niche market that’s hard to
get into,” he said.
Unlike those who grow the crop for oil production, the standards for
growing tea mint are stricter, Seus said. The crop is organically grown,
using beneficial and biological pest control measures instead of
pesticides, and no supplements.
The harvesting time frame for mint is short, five days maximum. Working
12-hour days with the swathers and combines isn’t unheard of. Seus has an
additional requirement of harvesting before the plants flower and diminish
the color of the leaves.
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Equipment must be modified to harvest the new crop, stripping the
leaves from the stalk without crushing them, which can lead to
frustration and mechanical setbacks.
“We call it the crop of one thousand
adjustments,” he said.
Despite the
difficulties and frustrations the crop can bring, Seus doesn’t plan on
cutting back his yields. His buyer keeps coming
back every year and is happy with the product. For that, he said he’ll
deal with the mechanical problems and long days.
Mint falls from a combine into a truck at Seus Farms |
Klamath Water Users Association
2455 Patterson Street, Suite 3
Klamath Falls, Oregon 97603
Phone (541) 883-6100
FAX (541) 883-8893
kwua@cvcwireless.net |