Good Fruit Grower

October 2013

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Craig Campbell, co-owner of Tieton Cider Works, holds a new aged reserve at the cidery in Tieton, Washington. While a proportion of certain dessert apple varieties can be used for blending, traditional cider apples (which are classified as sweet, bittersweet, sharp, or bittersharp) lend the cider more complexity and authenticity. Campbell started by planting a two-acre test plot with about 25 different varieties of cider apples. With the help of English cider expert Peter Mitchell, along with his own observations, he narrowed them down to the eight most suitable for commercial production. Some cider varieties are prone to extreme alternate bearing, and some mature very early when the weather is too hot in Washington, for example. The varieties they selected are: Yarlington Mill, Golden Russet, Harrison, Dabinett, Harry Master's Jersey, Kingston Black, Wickson Crab, and Stoke Red. He's also experimenting with red-fleshed varieties that would make pink cider. Craig said chemical thinning is critical to overcome biennial bearing. "We're learning each year how to chemical thin them," he said. "That's the key to being successful with these because you want a crop every year." Climate Craig Campbell shows the development of a 40,000 tree plot mostly containing bittersweet and bittersharp cider varieties, planted in tall-spindle rows. www.goodfruit.com "It's a little niche thing. If you have the distribution and you want to spend the time to do it, it's good business." Although it's been thought that cider apples would grow best in a maritime climate similar to that of England or France, where most of them originated, Craig thinks they can be grown anywhere—though they might fare better at high elevations than in hot areas. Most of the Campbells' acreage is at Tieton, where Craig's grandfather Lloyd began farming in the 1920s, at an elevation of 2,000 feet. Craig earned a degree in horticulture from Washington State University in 1973, but his father, Jim, encouraged him to go learn more about the sales business rather than return immediately to the farm. He went to work for a distant cousin who had a produce brokerage company in California and in 1977 formed CDS Distributing in San Francisco, where he has been a partner ever since. CDS represents several major fruit growers and shippers in Washington as well as produce shippers in California and other regions. In 1981, he bought a 50-acre orchard at Tieton from a cousin, and after the Alar scare of the late 1980s, transitioned into organic production. When he took over the family orchard after his father died in 1997, 80 percent of the acreage was Red Delicious. Campbell diversified into new varieties and now has only a few acres of Red Delicious. In addition to cider and perry varieties, he grows apples, pears, cherries, and apricots for the fresh market and recently planted a new white-fleshed apricot from New Zealand called Le Crème. Most of his production is organic. He divides his time between CDS and the orchard, and calls Seattle home. With his marketing insights, he tries to figure out what he can grow at his specific location that will match the sweet spot in the fresh market. "We're in the fruit distribution business, so you have that information," he said. "Most growers go to their packing houses or they get their information from the grower groups, which is fine. But having this information has really helped us to know what to plant and to have a plan for how we're going to sell it before we plant it." He's got Honeycrisp, which he thinks is a good fit for the high elevation. He also grows Pinova and Ambrosia, and what he calls "heirloom" varieties. "In Seattle, you can go and buy Gala and Fuji, and there's no excitement," he said. "Ashmead's Kernal, Spitzenberg, Gravenstein—those are the apples people want. It's a little niche thing. If you have the distribution and you want to spend the time to do it, it's good business." Campbell says plenty of CDS's customers are happy to take a few thousand boxes of an heirloom variety. What you won't find is a packing house willing to handle them, so Campbell rents warehouse space to pack his own. They sell for $40 a box f.o.b. and retail for around $2.99 a pound. One of his favorite apples is PixieCrunch, a small, early season apple with a similar texture to Honeycrisp, which was developed at the PRI (Purdue-Rutgers-Illinois) cooperative breeding program. "It's a fun little apple, and if I had enough guts, I would plant an orchard of it because I think it would be a home run," said Campbell, who sees demand for smaller apples than the apple industry at large produces. "We think we have a good future up here with our mix," he said, noting that he can't hope to harvest the tonnage that Columbia Basin growers do. Focusing on niche and heirloom varieties means he's unaffected by the commodity apple market. "Whether Red Delicious are selling for $5 or $50 a box, it has no effect on this orchard whatsoever," he said. "This is for a different usage. There's no competition. The big packing houses don't have the least interest in this thing." —Craig Campbell • This article by Geraldine Warner is the first of two parts. Coming next: Should the Campbells expand their cidery? GOOD FRUIT GROWER OCTOBER 2013 21

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