Wednesday,December23,2015The Nugget Newspaper,Sisters,Oregon15 Ladies’ Night Out celebrates the ranching lifestyle TheHighDesertMuseum celebratesthespiritofranch women as captured in the exhibit “Tough by Nature: Portraits of Cowgirls and R a n c h Wo m e n o f t h e AmericanWest,”withaneve- ningofcowgirlpoetry,liba- tionsandmusiconJanuary8, 2016. Listen to the rhythm of thetrailandranchingwayof lifeaspoetsEllenWaterston, JessicaHedges,LindaHussa andCarolynDufurrenaread from selected works. Their words will bring to life the essence of the ranching womenwhoseportraitshang intheexhibit. “Lynda Lanker captured the stories and images of the women and cowgirls in her exhibition, and Ladies’ Night Out will bring to life those portraits with words and music,” said Curator of Western History Laura Ferguson. AuthorandWritingRanch founderEllenWaterson is a poetandliteraryartsadvocate wholivedonaranchinrural Oregonandwrote“Wherethe CrookedRiverRises:AHigh DesertHome.” Jessica Hedges’ poetry gives depth and soul to the simpledailychoresofevery- dayranchinglife.Herwords connect to those who have lived the ranching lifestyle andtothosethatwantto. photo provided Rancher and poet Linda Jan Youren, 2004, by linda lanker, one of the paintings featured in the Hussa lives in northeast High Desert Museum’s exhibit Tough By Nature. Californiaontheedgeofthe BlackRockDesert.Anauthor essays, and teaches grades Evening of Music and of seven books of poetry 3-8inatwo-roomschool,25 CowgirlPoetryrunsfrom6to 8p.m.andtherewillbeano- andnon-fiction,sheartfully milesfromhome. In addition to the read- hostbarandhorsd’oeuvres. explores the way of life of ings, local bluegrass band Cost is $5 for members ruralWesterners. CarolynDufurrenadraws Bend n’ Strings will add and $10 for non-members. inspiration from the land their sweet harmonies and RSVP at www.highdesert andlivesofherneighboring acousticsoundstothefestive museum.org/rsvp or contact theMuseumat541-382-4754 ranchers.Dufurrenahaspub- evening. Ladies’ Night Out: An ext.241formoreinformation. lishedtwobooksofpersonal Funds help ranchers protect sage grouse USDA’sNaturalResources ConservationService(NRCS) ismakingabout$40millionin financialassistanceavailable in2016toagriculturalproduc- ersacrosstheWestwhowant torestoreandprotecthabitat forthegreatersagegrouse. This funding comes from the national Working Lands forWildlife (WLFW) initia- tive, an innovative partner- shipbetweenNRCS,theU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and private land- owners that supports strug- glinglandscapesandstrength- ensagriculturaloperations. Intotal,USDAwillinvest $50millionthisyearthrough WLFW across the nation; $40millionofthosefundsare goingdirectlytowardgreater sage grouse conservation in theWest. “The decisions of agri- cultural producers can have significant impacts on wild- life,” said NRCS Oregon State Conservationist Ron Alvarado.“Bymanagingland with sage grouse and other wildlife in mind, producers canbenefitentirepopulations whilealsostrengtheningtheir agriculturaloperations.” Conservation efforts to restore and protect the sage- brush landscape led the USFWS to determine in September that the greater sage grouse did not war- rant protection under the Endangered Species Act. Since 2010, NRCS and con- servation partners have workedwithrancherstomake conservationimprovementsto 4.4millionacresofsagebrush habitatacrosstheWest,ben- efitting sage grouse and 350 otherkindsofwildlife,includ- ingmuledeer,elk,pronghorn andgoldeneagles. With the support of con- servationpartnersandranch- ers, NRCS launched the Sage Grouse Initiative in 2010. Those efforts became themodelforWLFW,which begantwoyearslaterandnow covers a variety of species Merry Christmas & Happy Holidays from Eric, Deb, and the medical team at Your Care! We wish you and the ones you care about a very merry and healthy holiday season! Bring this ad in for a fl u shot at no cost to you! (Expires 12/29/15) Walk-In & Urgent Care Serving our Sisters Community... acrossthecountry,including thesagegrouse,NewEngland cottontail, Southwestern willow flycatcher, golden- winged warbler, gopher tor- toise,bogturtle,andthelesser prairie-chicken. “Working Lands for Wildlife helps land manag- ersintegratewildlife-friendly measures into their work- ing lands and also ensures they can keep those lands working,” said Zola Ryan, NRCS district conservation- istinHarneyCounty,oneof Oregon’s eight sage grouse counties. In Oregon, the WLFW funding will be provided to producers primarily through the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP). This is a voluntary finan- cial assistance program that reimburses producers for a portion of the expense to install conservation prac- tices on private agricultural lands.Conservationpractices include removing invasive juniper trees and other coni- fers,treatinginvasiveannual grasses, developing grazing managementplans,andmore. “Not only are these prac- tices good for sage grouse, but they promote an overall healthyrangelandecosystem,” Ryansaid. NRCS also offers sage grouse funding through the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program and the Conservation Stewardship Program. For more informa- tionabouttheseandotherpro- grams,contactalocalUSDA ServiceCenter. Applications will be screened and ranked for funding based on priority natural resource concerns. The sage grouse priority areas for Oregon are identi- fied in the SGI 2.0 Oregon ImplementationStrategy.This documentisavailableonthe NRCSOregonSGIwebpage. The next application deadlineforEQIPfundingis January15,2016. NEED HOLIDAY STORAGE? Boxes • Tape Packing Paper Storage Units 506 N. Pine St. 541-548-2899 541 548 2899 3818 SW 21st Pl., Redmond www.YourCareMedical.com 541-549-9631 • SistersRental.com Sales • Service • Rentals • Accessories