by Hannelore Sudermann photography by Chris Anderson and Robert Hubner
 Hop flowers ripen in the warm Yakima Valley air. Photo by Chris Anderson.
A lush pocket of Washington, the Yakima Valley is a really a
back yard for our state. No fancy landscaping. It's our garden on
the east side of the Cascades, filled with pear trees, cherries,
mint, and acres of hop yards—strange and beautiful jungles of green
where vines twine their way up trellises to wire canopies 18 feet
above the ground.
The youngest son of a local farm family, Jason Perrault, 36, is
walking us into a hop yard and explaining the challenges of growing
hops nowadays, the issues of oversupply and low prices. It's early
afternoon, and a dry August wind is blowing through the farm.
Things around here don't start jumping until after sunset, says
Jason. "Then the hops come off the vine better. The cones are less
prone to shatter."
The fragile cones, which are made up of hop flowers, are almost
lighter than air, but they are prized for their potency. Their
acids are what influence the character of beer. Early in the
brewing process, they preserve the beer and make it bitter. At the
end, they provide the flavor and aroma.
As Jason walks into the yard, he reaches up and snaps off a few
cones. He pulls one apart, crushing the gold-green bloom into his
palm. Then he bends his head and inhales. He offers me one and I do
the same. I can almost taste the beer it will make.
 Jason Perrault '97 breathes in the aroma of drying hops at his family's
farm near Toppenish in the Yakima Valley. Photo by Chris Anderson.
We climb into Jason's truck and speed across the landscape
around the town of Toppenish, as Jason points out the now-empty
fields where hops used to grow. In the past 20 years many of the
valley's yards have disappeared, he explains. "Now there are only
about 50 or 60 families left," he says, attributing the decline to
overproduction in the late '90s and early 2000s. The number of
farms may be dwindling, but this quiet valley produces about 75
percent of the hops grown in the United States. Much of it feeds
the big industrial brewers as well as beer makers in Europe and
Asia.
A fourth-generation heir to a hops-farming legacy, Jason started
working in the hops vines at the age of five, when his father paid
him 50 cents an hour to help wind twine for the trellises. A few
years later he had his first real job, arching the vines, which
meant training the shoots from one plant in two directions to form
a Y as they reach upward, a miserable task, as the plants are
covered with sharp hairs.
When he enrolled as an agricultural economics student at
Washington State University, he knew he wanted to go back to the
valley and farm with his family. But by the time he graduated in
1997, there wasn't enough work for him to join the family business
full time. Instead, he returned to school to learn the science of
hops breeding, earning a master's degree in crop science in 2001.
Now he runs a breeding program for a group of hops farmers,
including his family. "I'm kind of a step away from the farm," says
Jason. "I want to do work that will not only impact us, but will
benefit the whole industry. If the others go away, we're going to
go away, too."
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