County fortunate for General Feed & Grain |
February 7, 2012 |
By Mike Ashby
As we cruise about As with the local timber
industry, farming in The These farm families are
helping to feed the world. The grains and
grasses they produce are shipped around the
globe. To think a family in
General Feed & Grain, currently operated by Victor Arthur Rae, his wife, Tess, and their three children, is one of our community’s oldest family-owned businesses. Victor’s grandfather started the business in the 1940’s. The current grain elevator was built by his father in 1954.
Now, when grain mills and elevators are becoming a thing of the past, Victor and his crew of ten men and women are filling an extremely important niche in the region’s farming industry. Victor buys locally-produced grains, along with corn grown in the Inland Northwest, and mills them into thirty different types of animal feed. These 800 to 1,000 tons of feed produced each year are in demand not only by a large number of local “stump farmers,” but by farmers from as far away as Kalispell, Montana, and Coeur d’ Alene as well.
Even customers from General Feed & Grain also
ships some two million pounds of locally grown
seed annually. Besides large proprietary seed
multiplication, they mix and market lawn seed,
wildflower and pasture mix, all of which are
especially formulated for With more and more emphasis
these days on self-reliance in
General Feed & Grain mills our local grains into the feeds which grow the animals that provide many of us with the meat we put on our table. Their fertilizers and seeds grow our hay crops, pastures, lawns and gardens. Because of our valley farmers and Victor Rae, we are able to truly “eat local.” Victor’s brother, Brian, is planning to move back to Bonners Ferry in July of this year. He will be joining his brother in the family grain business. Victor thanks all who make living and working here so enjoyable. We may not have the timber industry we once had in the county and some may think tourism is the answer to our economic woes.
But the truth of the matter is, farming is a very important, renewable and sustainable local industry.
Thank the good Lord for the
rich soil of the |