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https://www.capitalpress.com/ag_sectors/livestock/hay-industry-leader-david-king-succumbs-to-cancer-at-age-62/article_79493f72-8838-11ec-bb5b-eb33d7c9c0a4.html
Hay
industry leader David King succumbs to cancer at age 62
Capital Press 2/7/22
(KBC
NOTE:
David's father, Frank King, was a 1949 Tulelake Homesteader)
King, 62, had been a hay grower in the Malin, Ore., area
since returning to Klamath County after graduating from Cal
Poly-San Luis Obispo in California with an ag business
degree in 1982. The King farm grows alfalfa, grass, timothy
and triticale hay and grain. The farm was a member of the
High Mountain Hay Growers Cooperative that marketed and sold
the hay products.
King was a founding member of the state hay association. He
was both a long-time secretary of the state organization and
president of the Klamath Basin hay association.
“David put a lot of hours into both organizations, trying to
make them better, to make them work,” said Mylen Bohle, the
recently retired Oregon State University Extension hay and
forage specialist for Central Oregon. “He saw the value of
the two organizations.”
King had planned to participate in an evening zoom meeting
of the state association on the day he died.
“David's whole love was farming,” said Robin King, his wife
of 40 years. “He enjoyed the satisfaction of seeing things
grow. He believed in the marketing part of the business and
that's why he was also a believer in the hay grower
associations. He believed you could move forward as a group
better than as an individual.”
King was first diagnosed with leukemia in 1998. In 1999, he
had a bone marrow transplant with his daughter Whitney being
the donor. Six years ago, he had surgery to remove cancerous
cells and then last year another surgery.
Robin King and their son Cameron will continue to work the
family operation. The couple’s two daughters are also
involved in agriculture. Angelina King works for the
Tulelake Irrigation District and Whitney Cantrell is an
accountant for Macy’s Flying Service and also does
bookkeeping for the family’s farm operation.
David and Robin King each have long family histories in the
Klamath Basin. Robin’s great-grandparents came to the area
in the early 1900s.
David’s father, Frank King, got a homestead in the Malin
(CORRECTION: Tulelake) area as a veteran in 1949. That
homestead property is still part of the family operation
with the land being used to graze cattle.
David King was known as an innovator, trying new ways to
benefit the soil and to conserve water. He was willing to
share what worked best for his farming operation.
“He wanted to promote education as much as possible,” Robin
King said of her husband. “He worked hard every day to do it
right and to produce a high-quality product. That was
important to him.
“It was also important to him that people got the right
facts and perspective so they would better understand
agriculture,” she added.
Laurence Bagg, another Malin area hay grower, described King
as efficient, creative and progressive. Bagg said King
laser-leveled several fields to make them more efficient for
flood irrigating.
Scott Pierson, a Silver Lake, Ore., hay grower, agreed that
King was “extremely innovative.”
“But he was also interactive,” Pierson said. “You could ask
him questions, but then he wanted to know more about your
operation, your soil and water issues.
“He was a serious representative for the ag industry,”
Pierson added. “He could be a professional among suits or
easily talk to a person who was just getting into the
industry.”
Bohle said King is “a real loss to his family, the Klamath
Basin and to the Oregon Hay and Forage group.”
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