NOTE:  U-PICK BLUEBERRY LOCATION IS DIFFERENT THAN OUR APPLE U-PICK LOCATION.  ONLY A FEW BLOCKS AWAY.  ADDRESS BELOW.  Thanks!

Our blueberry stand and U-Pick field is open Thursday to Saturdays, 9am to 4pm.

Blueberries likely will last through July. 

Our u-pick field and stand where you can buy pre-picked blueberries is located at 5371 Brooklake Rd NE, in downtown Brooks.  Just 2 blocks east of the only traffic light in Brooks.

$1.20 per pound for u-pick.

Cash or check only.  We also accept WIC and Farm Direct coupons.

Hope to see you there!  The berries are easy to pick, big and beautiful!  You will be picking off of 20 year old bushes so they are LOTS of berries! 

U-Pick Blueberries are Comin' Up!

U-Pick blueberries will be here soon!

We will start Thursday, June 25th.  We will be open Thursday thru Saturdays, 9am to 4pm this year. 

We have a large field of Bluecrop blueberries.  They are our sweetest and biggest berries.  Located off of Brooklake Rd a 1/4 mile east of the only traffic light in downtown Brooks (99E and Brooklake Rd.  If you see a blueberry field covered with netting, that is the one!)

Our commercial blueberries we started picking Friday which is crazy earlier than normal.  We are all ready though so it is not a major stress.  Plus it is so wonderful each time we get those blueberries off the bushes!  We have a year's worth of time and money investment into those little things so the last few weeks can get a little stressful thinking of all the things that could go wrong right before you can get them picked.

My daughter got to pick her first blueberry this year!  At first she didn't seem to believe me that she could eat one.  But after I popped one into my mouth, she couldn't stop eating them it seemed!

We also put our blueberry net up again for the year over 10 acres of berries.  Each year we get a little better idea how to put it up faster.

The u-pick apples are about the size of a golf ball right now!  They are growing well, trying to get prepared for all you visitors in the fall!

We are also growing Radish Seed, Kale Seed, Tall Fescue grass seed, and Corn this year.  Our combine will be busy this year!

Miss all the activity you guys bring when you come to pick our apples!  But this year has flown by already so I know the fall will be here in no time.

Hope you are enjoying the summer so far!

I apologize for the layout of the words today.  I'm having lots of trouble with the formatting lately.  It seems like it has a mind of his own.  But I wanted to get the information out to you!


Springtime came fast!

Well somehow it is spring here! We had to go into overdrive a little near the end of pruning our apples.  Because of the weather, everything is 3 weeks early so far this year so our winter seemed to go quickly!

We sometimes hire this machine to come top our trees.  We still have to do lots of hand pruning afterwards to do.  We like our trees pretty low so sometimes this machine doesn't quite cut low enough.  The person driving it is practically barricaded into a metal cab just in case one of the round cutter blades were to come off, but more so they don't get pelted with flying branches.

         Apple Topper

         Apple Topper

         Apple Topper

         Apple Topper

         Before Topping

         Before Topping

         After Topping

         After Topping

Small Apples

Small Apples

Even Smaller Apples

Even Smaller Apples

We hung our bug pheromone  sticky traps in the apples to keep watch for any codling moth.  (Codling moths are the bugs you can thank for worm holes in your apples.)  This year we also hung in each tree a mating disruptor for the codling moth.  It is a little ring you slide over a branch near the top of the tree.  It's pheromone (smell a bug can smell) confuses the codling moths so they can't find each other to mate.  Pretty cool because it is an organic method to repel codling moths.  We are excited to see how well it works.

Mating Disruptor

Mating Disruptor

Outside Bug Trap

Outside Bug Trap

Inside Bug Trap

Inside Bug Trap

Sticks Straightening Apple Trees

Sticks Straightening Apple Trees

Other Farm Happenings:

A majority of the blueberries are done blooming too.  Whew we made it through without a frost!  Each developmental stage the blueberry goes through has a different cold temperature it can withstand before it is ruined.  When the berry is in full blossom, it can withstand 28 degrees.  Right after the blossom falls off, where you have a tiny green berry, it can only stand 32 degrees.  This is actually where we are right now so we are at the most vulnerable stage.  Thankfully the forecast looks good.

Here is a good site to see pictures of this:

http://blueberries.msu.edu/growing_blueberries/growth_stages_table

We are also walking our grass seed fields, hoeing out any grasses that are not Tall Fescue grass.  We already did a pass through in the fall and got the majority but now is the time to check again.  It is especially important to do a good job on the grass fields that were just planted in the fall.  If you start your field off clean, it will be much easier to manage as the years go by.  We keep our grass fields in for a minimum of 3 years, many times longer if the yield is still doing well.  You don't want any weed seeds, especially other grass seed types, in your field.  After harvest, our grass seed gets tested up at Oregon State.  There are 225,000 seeds in one pound of Tall Fescue grass seed.  If they find more than 1 weed seed (especially another type of grass seed), you may have to renegotiate with your grass seed buyer for a lower price, or the buyer can choose to reject your seed, since we signed a contract stating our grass seed would be clean up to their standards. So that's why when you see a whole line of people slowly walking a grass field in a line, that is what they are doing!

Well I am off to work (on what seems to be) too much paperwork for our upcoming annual Global Gap blueberry food safety audit in July.  If I don't get started now, I will never get it done! That is starting to be one of the hardest parts about Spring, having to be inside working on this when there are so many other important things to do. I'm not against the audit at all in theory but in reality it seems to take up so much of my time each year.  I did just finish all the paperwork for our Norpac Stewardship Food Alliance audit so that is one checked off the list!  I will keep plugging away...and at least I can have the door of the office open so I can get some fresh air!