
Flax is an annual oilseed grown for raw seeds and oil as end use products. Flax acreage is limited in Washington state. Dryland flax seed yields in the Pacific Northwest can range from 2000 to 3000 lbs of seed per acre. Flax can offer rotational diversity and benefits to the existing grain-legume crop rotations, and has been used as a companion crop with chickpeas in Canada and the Northwest.
Click here for a fact sheet on flax from Oregon State University.
- CSS Field Day Abstracts
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- Hang, A.N. 2009. Preliminary Trial of Flax for Seed Production in Washington (pdf). In 2009 Field Day Abstracts: Highlights of Research Progress. Dept. of Crop and Soil Sciences Tech. Report 09-1, WSU, Pullman, WA.
Click here to see all the CSS Field Day Abstracts.
- Conference Presentations
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- 2015 PNW Oilseed and Direct Seed Cropping Systems Conference
- Oilseed Flax as a Dryland Broadleaf Rotation in the Pacific Northwest (pdf)
Tomas Endicott, Willamette Biomass Processors, Inc., Rickreall, OR - Flax by Tomas Endicott (pdf) Willamette Biomass Processors
- Oilseed Flax as a Dryland Broadleaf Rotation in the Pacific Northwest (pdf)
- 2015 PNW Oilseed and Direct Seed Cropping Systems Conference
For more information on flax contact:
Isaac Madsen
Phone: 360-448-9081
isaac_madsen@wsu.edu
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Samantha Crow
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