Floyd to help dedicate new research orchard

WENATCHEE —  Elson S. Floyd, Ph.D., Washington State University’s new president, will be the featured speaker at the dedication ceremony for the university’s new tree fruit research orchard southeast of Wenatchee on Thursday, Sept. 20.

The dedication begins at 10 a.m. at the new orchard, which is located approximately 20 miles southeast of Wenatchee off State Highway 28 on Sunrise Lane SW. President Floyd will discuss the value of research in helping to keep Washington competitive worldwide.

Other participants include Jim Doornink, chair of the Washington Tree Fruit Research Commission; Dan Bernardo, dean of the WSU College of Agricultural, Human, and Natural Resource Sciences; and Jay Brunner, director of the WSU Tree Fruit Research and Extension Center at Wenatchee. Also attending will be John Gardner, WSU vice president for economic development and extension, and Linda Kirk Fox, WSU associate vice president for extension.

When the Washington State Tree Fruit Research and Extension Center was founded 70 years ago, it literally was out in the middle of nowhere. Gradually, though, the city of Wenatchee has grown up around it, leaving little or no room for expansion.

Because of encroaching housing development, the university sold 70 of its 100 acres in Wenatchee to the Wenatchee School District three years ago. The school district bought the land for future expansion, so WSU has been able to maintain its research orchard here for an agreed upon period of time.

The WSU Tree Fruit Research and Extension Center office, labs and shop will remain on the 30 acres still owned by WSU in Wenatchee. The new site includes 150 acres of orchard property, 20 acres of highway frontage and 137 acres of undeveloped land. The WSU Board of Regents approved the purchase of Sunrise Orchard in March 2006.

“The new research orchard provides enough room in the right location to help serve the needs of fruit researchers – apples, pears, cherries, wine grapes and other small fruits – for years to come,” Brunner said.

Next Story

Recent News

Selling the city: students elevate Vancouver’s tourism strategy

WSU students partnered with Visit Vancouver to develop real-world tourism strategies, identifying new event opportunities and marketing ideas that highlight the city’s growing potential as a regional destination.

Greek Week success provides big support for Pullman downtown businesses

Over 1,500 students from WSU Pullman’s Greek community recently converged on downtown Pullman to help with many projects including spring cleaning, food distribution at the Community Action Center, organizing trivia for Bishop Place residents, and raising money to support local businesses.

Jon Haarlow to lead Washington State Athletics

Haarlow, who has served as interim athletic director since Nov. 12, 2025, will be introduced at a press conference in the Alger Family Club Room at Gesa Field, Monday, April 20, at 11 a.m.

Rare Angora goat rejoins her herd after surgery at WSU

A rare Angora goat from northern Idaho has returned to her herd after WSU veterinarians performed a minimally invasive surgery to remove cystic ovaries that had been threatening her health and behavior.