More of Our Story

The day Chris Jepsen first called me for stories about my Grandfather Rudy Boysen in June 2016, I was grinning from ear to ear the rest of the day. My father, Robert Boysen, was Rudy and Margaret Boysen’s only son, and Chris was writing an article about Grandpa Rudy, inventor of the boysenberry! I had no idea that less than two years later my husband, Tom, and I would sell our 2400 sq. ft., Las Vegas, NV dream home, buy 10 acres of prime farmland in Orland, California, and become growers of Rudy’s heritage boysenberries! That phone call from Chris in June 2016 started the life-changing chain of events that led Tom and I to where we are today: living in a 400 sq. ft., twenty-year-old 5<sup>th</sup>-wheel RV that we bought for $1.00 from our dearest friends John and Joyce Kulp, so we could live on the 10-acre property we named Boysen Berry Farm. I’m still grinning ear to ear as I look out the front window and see our boysenberry vines  on the trellis lines, robust and healthy!
 
When Chris Jepsen asked for help with his article, I provided him with photo albums and horticultural scrapbooks Rudy had put together from his early 1900s school years on through the 1940s. It was Chris’s thorough research, however, that led him to discover an original boysenberry vine, the descendants of which are now growing on our farm. Chris found a tiny June 20, 1958 Napa Register clipping entitled “Beginning Here for Boysenberry”. The boysenberry’s Coombsville (i.e., Napa) origins Chris already knew, but he read on to the end which related Margaret Boysen, widow of the late Rudy Boysen, “developer of the luscious berry” had visited Rudy’s younger brother, Leland Boysen, in Merced, CA on June 10, 1958. The clipping’s final sentence, however, set Chris to track down that last remaining original boysenberry vine: “…Margaret Boysen visited the home of her husband’s brother at Merced, where the original Coombsville vine is still growing and producing berries. Her brother-in-law had moved the vine there in 1955.
 
Chris contacted Leland Boysen’s three granddaughters and inquired about the vine. Was it still growing in Merced? They weren’t sure, but remembered that some starts from the original boysenberry vine were given away in 1976 at Leland’s granddaughter Carrie’s wedding. Chris’s hunt finally paid off when he tracked down Alice Masek, a family member who received some starts from Leland’s widow, Augusta Boysen at Carrie’s wedding. Yes, she took them home, planted them, and they were still growing and producing berries in her backyard in Castro Valley, CA, near San Francisco.
 
When Chris emailed me with this news on July 3, 2016, I had tears streaming down my face, I was so overwhelmed with joy! I emailed Alice right away at the address she had given to Chris and introduced myself, with the starting line, “This might be one of the more unusual emails you will get this year. My name is Jeanette (Boysen) Fitzgerald. I am the granddaughter of Rudy Boysen…” and after giving her a few more details, came right out and told her I would like some cuttings from her backyard vines. I didn’t beat around the bush.
 
Alice responded a few hours later and explained her husband, Mike Masek’s brother, Paul Masek, joined the “Boysen” family when he married Carrie Shook Masek, Leland Boysen’s granddaughter, in January 1976. Alice continued: “I don’t even remember the grandmother’s name, only that she was very sweet and had a shoebox with boysenberry root cuttings and declared at the wedding we were “in the family,” so she could share them with us, but that we were not to propagate them or share them with others (EXCEPT other members of the family, so you qualify!)”
 
Alice also generously offered to meet Tom and I halfway with some vine cuttings, but we eventually all agreed on an August visit to Mike and Alice’s home instead. Alice and Mike were to become our close friends after that initial email and hundreds of emails between Alice and me since. Tom and I set up grow lights for the clippings we would take at our visit. Unfortunately, after getting them home, every single cutting slowly died after a few weeks and none produced any roots. Had we done more research, we would have learned boysenberries must be propagated a certain way, either by root-starts or by dipping the tip of a growing cane into the soil and leaving it connected to the “mother vine” for at least two months until it develops a root system, before transplanting it during dormant season in winter.
 
The Fallbrook Connection:
 
In August 2016 I hosted a small reunion in my Las Vegas, NV home with church friends I grew up with in the 1970s in Oceanside, CA. We’d all found each other on Face book after many years apart. Joni Cyr, one of my guests at the reunion, had just bought a vineyard in Fallbrook, CA. She literally had just closed the deal on the vineyard (by phone in my living room) during the reunion. She rejoined us as I was telling the story about our boysenberries, and she said what perfect timing this was. She said, Jeanette, I have a vacant spot in my new vineyard and want you to grow your boysenberries there.” (It was a 4 ½ hour drive from Las Vegas, but with perfect weather, good soil, and no place else to grow them…) When I asked her how I could repay her, Joni said, “I don’t want anything, Jeanette, I just love you and want you to have a place to grow your boysenberries.” Joni was opening a door quickly changed our lives.</span>
 
Over the next few months, Cousin Alice put in tip starts in her backyard to prepare for a winter planting. When the time came, on January 15, 2017 Alice and Mike dug up the tip starts as well as some root-starts, loaded their Jeep with a full wheelbarrow and made the 10 hour drive down to Fallbrook. They helped Tom and I plant the starts in a bed we’d prepared for 24 boysenberry vines. We had even purchased root cages to protect the vines from gophers, and prepared and installed an 8-inch deep, three foot high rabbit fence all around the 16- x 80-foot boysenberry patch. Tom had designed and installed a solar powered automatic drip irrigation system to regularly water the vines. We made the 4 ½ hour drive back and forth about twice a month to take care of the patch.
 
I named each of the 24 vines after family members and friends and monitored their growth every time we visited the boysenberry patch. We followed directions for growing boysenberries I found online, and in July 2017 we began tip-starting. Tom and I also started looking for land throughout California and Oregon, using the UCDavis soil survey website and Realtor.com to find possible sites to grow more boysenberries. Tom had convinced me Grandpa Rudy’s legacy is part of my heritage, and encouraged me to take the huge risk of selling our house, developing a brand, and buying the perfect land to grow boysenberries. The long-term goal would be to also propagate and sell the vines, and to get them growing in as many backyards as we can.
 
Throughout the summer and on into November 2017, Tom and I (mostly Tom) propagated over 950 tip-starts from the original 24 vines. I was constrained from helping Tom with the tip-starts because I was so busy with my job as a special ed. facilitator. We had not yet found suitable land at a price we could afford and continued our search. January 2018 arrived and we were still searching. We’d found a 15-acre organic farm with the perfect soil type for $150,000 in Oregon and made a full price offer, but the owners decided to take one more shot at staying together and took the beautiful farm off the market.
 
Tom and I both really wanted to stay in California because on average California has 100 more sunny days per year than most places in Oregon. Many of the California listings we looked at that had the perfect soil type, however, also have a moratorium on any new agriculture because of drought. Tom continued his research and found that farmers in the town of Orland, CA use flood irrigation from two reservoirs to water their crops: Orland has the cheapest water in the state. We were well into January with no Orland prospects except one 10-acre plot with perfect soil we’d found a few months earlier, but the owner had priced his land out of our financial reach.
 
Just south and across the street from the 10-acre land we had our eye on was a vacant 5-acre piece of property, sheltered from summer winds by tall trees. Maybe we could lease the land. I found out who owned the property and wrote the owner about our project, requesting a possible lease. She called me as soon as she got the letter, and although she didn’t want to lease the land, she was extremely knowledgeable about farming and became an immediate friend and future neighbor.
 
It was February 1, 2018 and we were running out of time.  We had 950+ starts, but nowhere to plant them. Joni and her husband offered to let us lease some of their land, but leasing just didn’t seem wise to us, so Tom and I decided to make another offer on the perfect land in Orland that was priced higher than we could afford. The owner came back with a counter-offer, and we had a deal! That evening, the owner informed the alfalfa farmer who was leasing the land that he had a buyer who was going to grow boysenberries. The alfalfa farmer informed the owner he had sprayed the property that afternoon with a powerful herbicide that lasts two years. It kills or slows the growth of all plants except alfalfa. When Tom and I received this news a few days later, we called the herbicide manufacturer for more information and he warned us that the herbicide is deadly to all blackberry plants, of which boysenberry is a hybrid. He strongly discouraged us from trying to grow boysenberries on the treated land.
 
Tom and I were out of options for a place to grow all the Fallbrook starts, and they were ready for transplanting. Tom suggested that we buy the Orland property and replace the dirt surrounding every start. We could rent an auger, dig a three-foot wide hole, and fill each hole with a 70/30 compost/soil mix. That’s exactly what we did after we purchased the property on February 16, 2018. Tom also rewired the old non-functioning electrical box full of old wasps’ nests, arranged to pull and re-plumb the 40 ft. deep well, and prepared the old septic tank for use. Our friend, John Kulp, then helped Tom set up the RV on the property a week before our spring break transplanting trip.
 
The last week of March was the final window to safely transplant bare-root tip-starts. A friend of mine helped dig up over 600 starts in Fallbrook, and rode with us during the 12-hour drive north to the farm in Orland. Alice and Mike met us there and helped us plant every other hole, leaving room in between for propagating and expanding the 1 ½ acres we’d prepared.
 
Tom and I have encountered additional challenges since planting in April, but the vines are thriving and we anticipate a substantial first harvest in June 2019. We were thrilled with our first harvest in Fallbrook last year. Many of the boysenberries were huge, the size of Rudy’s thumb (as he liked to describe them). And the taste surpassed all expectations. We rediscovered why everyone went crazy for boysenberries back in the 1930s when they were first marketed. Today’s commercial boysenberries don’t compare. Rudy’s legacy will live on anew. I have Chris Jepsen to thank for starting this awesome adventure with a simple phone call. I have Alice and Mike Masek to thank for keeping Rudy’s legacy alive. Most of all, I have my husband to thank for recognizing my unique heritage and this opportunity to reintroduce the world to Rudy’s Original 1923 Boysenberry.