BEARDSLEY, Minn. - Farmers Anne and Peter Schwagerl pull over the pickup truck and let out their dog, Scout, to run up and down the gravel road.
"He's a bird dog who doesn't hunt," Peter Schwagerl said. "So we need to replicate" hunting for exercise.
The need to adapt to circumstances is a western Minnesota grain farmer's forte, especially lately as environmental dollars are thrown at the owners of cropland. The Schwagerls are doing just that with a new oilseed called camelina. This hardy winter crop can be planted in the fall and harvested in the spring — and it is having a moment.
This new cash crop fits snugly into the Schwagerls cropping rotation system and is already popping up in small green tendrils from their soil.
"In central Minnesota and north, there's just so few options for winter hardy cover [crops]," Anne Schwagerl said. "Rye seems to be, more or less, the only one. But camelina is equally hardy."
A member of the mustard family, the plant can grow when many other crops won't in cold Minnesota. The Schwagerls planted their acres of camelina in the fall. It will go dormant in the winter, but will pick up growth in the spring.
"What they're doing now is that it's a winter annual instead of what's being grown out west, which is a spring-seeded crop," Peter Schwagerl said.
Camelina's value could be felt come spring, when rains pound the land. Such downpours often drain nitrogen and soil into creeks. But fields with leafy, green cover — such as camelina — can better absorb the water. According to one analysis, right now roughly 52% of Minnesota farms sit barren, losing carbon and allowing fall fertilizer to leach into the watershed.