The Business of Processing Seeds (Capital Press)
Pictured above: Brandt Hayden; left, pulls seed out of Oregon Seed Cleaning’s processor in Brooks to check the machine’s performance with Dwayne Hayden, president of West Coast Seed Mill Supply. The company works with 25 to 30 American seed-processing manufacturers to help growers and other customers clean, sort and size hundreds of products.
This article first appeared in the Capital Press.
February 19, 2004
By JAN JACKSON
Freelance Writer
SALEM – Since his boyhood days on a northeastern Montana’s wheat and sugar beet farm, Dwayne Hayden has been at home with seeds. Today, Hayden is still at home with seeds but as president of West Coast Seed Mill Supply.
At West Coast Seed Mill, Hayden works with 25 to 30 American seed processing equipment manufacturers to make sure he has a supplier that can handle any seed need a grower might come up with.
“Most of our suppliers have test labs that can help growers solve whatever problem they need to solve,” Hayden said. “Since everything that comes out of a field has to be cleaned and/or sorted, we first visit the grower and from there can help him find the best way to do it. Everything needs sized or shaped by length, width and weight. It’s a challenge for us to find the best way to do it.”
The list of seed and non-seed items the Haydens are called on to help with is long. It includes every kind of grasses, flowers, vegetables and grain. It includes powdered onions, garlic, spices, coffee beans and nuts. There are also lavender, meadowfoam and mint or peas, beans and pumpkin seeds.
“Ninety-five percent of our business deals with things like peas, wheat, vegetable, flowers, grass seed and the like,” Hayden said. “But the other 5 percent of our business deals with things like recycled rubber and plastic, cat litter, dog food, potato chips, cookies and candies. We never know what we are going to be asked to help someone solve.”
Hayden moved to the Northwest in 1988 in search for a warmer place to live.
“I managed several ag businesses in northeastern Montana up near the North Dakota border until I decided to move where the winters weren’t so cold,” Hayden said. “I still have to go there to meet with customers but at least I get to come home. I call on growers in Western Montana and Wyoming, Northern Utah, Nevada, Idaho, Washington and Oregon.
“My son Brandt works with me now and he is taking on clients of his own and is doing well at it,” Hayden continued. “We have been working with one of our suppliers and helped them develop a machine specifically for grass seed, which will be a boom to grass seed growers. Brandt is opening a new seed cleaning plant right now.”
Brandt Hayden, who shares his dad’s enthusiasm for solving all problems of feed and seed processing, is a former college baseball player with a business and economics degree. The company occupies a farmhouse that has both office and shop space.
“When I started in the sales business in 1988, I was given a map and turned loose,” Hayden said. “Today I have sales representatives in Idaho Falls and Junction City, my daughter Merrissa goes to college and works part time in the office and Brandt is now part of the company.
“Brandt has been going out on sales calls with me since he was 10 years old. He has a good background in engineering, the enthusiasm to solve all matters of feed, and of course now he has his own map.”