Wednesday, September 28, 2022

Clyde School and Wheat Chaff

To the north of Walla Walla is a small community named Clyde. There is not much there now, just a few scattered farm houses and some agricultural support activities. It is wide open, rolling terrain, wheat country. Here is a map that gives you a perspective of Clyde in relation to Walla Walla. Clyde is about 30 miles north
We had mentioned the wheat country. Here the field has been harvested and the wheat chaff has been baled for further uses. Bailing the chaff keeps the farmer from burning all of it or tilling it back into the soil. The bails are quite large weighing 650-800 lbs and that is dry wheat chaff.
Here is the very old Clyde School. Deanna, years ago, was raised outside of Clyde and went to this school when it looked much better and was functioning. It was a 1 room schoolhouse and had several grades all taught by the one teacher. The home, the teacher lived in, is the small attached building on the left in this image.
This is just a view a little further to the right and you can see all the windows. A family was supposed to take care of and restore the old school but as you can see that did not happen. It appears to be well beyond repairable at this point.
When the wheat is harvested it is taken to any number of terminals and storage facilities scattered around the county. This terminal is along the Snake River and has large storage elevators. Additionally the large pyramid shaped pile under the white canvas is all wheat waiting to be shipped down river on barges. A lot of wheat is harvested in this area.
When the wheat is harvested there is residual chaff left behind. As seen in the earlier image it is baled and used in a variety of other processes. Some for cattle bedding. Here we can see lots of large bales stacked in the field.
Another potential use for the wheat chaff can be found at Columbia Pulp a small production facility near Starbuck, WA. Columbia Pulp is North America’s first alternative fiber market pulp mill, using wheat farmers’ waste straw to create pulp for paper products as well as bio-polymers for a variety of industrial uses.

Unfortunately Columbia Pulp encountered various production issues and marketing problems and has not been able, yet, to get up to full production.
The wheat keeps growing and the bales keep getting created year after year but the pulp plant cannot process any of them. They claim they are going to get started as soon as some issues are worked out but that remains to be seen.
There are lots and lot of bales stored at a variety of locations. Many were purchased by Columbia Pulp and now just sit in storage, deteriorating. How long it will be before the mill starts up and the bales are used seems to be anyone's guess at this point.
Here we can see some of the deterioration. It is not clear how useable these bales could be. They are really not bales any longer so beside of the issue as to what to do with them there is the huge problem of handling and tranporting them in this deteriorated state.
The pulp plant with promises and big dreams remains in idle limbo. There is a skeleton crew working there to keep the place functional but not enough staff to actually run full production. It remains to be seen if or when it actually gets going and the wheat chaff is processes.

This was a brief look at the growing number of wheat chaff bales. As you drive around you can see a lot of these bales stacked and waiting, just waiting. Some will be used for livestock fodder and bedding in dairys but a lot will just wait stored in a field.

We hope you enjoyed this brief look at wheat chaff and the old school.

Let us know if you have any questions.
All the best - Be Well - George & Deanna

2 comments:

  1. Great post. Marty and I stopped here a year or so ago, he remembered you saying that Deanna had gone to school here. ♥️

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  2. Great start with a map. Fascinating photos. Maybe you could bring the school house up to par.......

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