S ERVING THE S ILVERTON A REA S INCE 1880 50 C ENTS ● A U NIQUE E DITION OF THE S TATESMAN J OURNAL V OL . 136, N O . 33 W EDNESDAY , A UGUST 2, 2017 SILVERTONAPPEAL.COM Growing wildfire near Detroit closes Jefferson Park, Pacific Crest Trail ZACH URNESS STATESMAN JOURNAL The Whitewater Fire burning east of Detroit has continued to grow, reaching 167 acres during the weekend in the Mount Jefferson Wilderness. Officials responded by shutting down access to Jefferson Park, a popular hik- ing and backpacking destination, and an 11-mile segment of the Pacific Crest Trail, along with four other pathways that were already closed. The closures officially began at 6 a.m. on Monday. “We understand it is inconvenient but our priority is to protect public safety,” Detroit District Ranger Grady McMa- han said in a news release. With the forecast calling for boiling hot weather, fire officials expect the fire to grow even larger during the week. More than 125 firefighters are bat- tling the blaze including three helicop- ters and three hand crews working steep and rugged terrain. A new fire camp has been established at the Hoodoo Ski Area as fire teams bring in heavy equipment to try and contain the blaze. The fire comes at the worst possible time. Tens of thousands are expected to descend on Detroit and the Mount Jeffer- son area for the total solar eclipse on Aug. 21. Many had planned to view the event from Jefferson Park. McMahan said previously the Forest Service would do everything in its power to have the area open by the eclipse. “I would like to tell people that we’ll have this trailhead and trails open for the eclipse, but at this point I can’t tell if that will be possible,” said Grady McMahan, district ranger for Willamette National Forest. The cause of the fire is a month-old lightning strike in the Whitewater Creek area, officials said. It’s not uncommon for lightning strikes to smolder in the forest before sparking a fire much later. “It’s often a surprise to the public, but it’s not uncommon for fires to pop up a week or more after the storm,” said Chris Donaldson, assistant fire manage- ment officer with Willamette National Forest, in a 2015 interview with the See FIRE, Page 2A Will eclipse day be sunny or cloudy? 1997 1998 1999 2000 COURTESY OF THE WILLAMETTE NATIONAL FOREST The Whitewater fire is burning the Mount Jefferson Wilderness area. STEM classes take root in Silverton 2001 CHRISTENA BROOKS SPECIAL TO THE APPEAL TRIBUNE 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Here’s what recent history tells us about Aug. 21 ZACH URNESS STATESMAN JOURNAL Here’s the good news: For each of the last seven years, a person in the Mid-Valley would have had a great view of the upcoming total solar eclipse. Satellite data show that Aug. 21has been clear and sunny around 10 a.m. each morning going back to 2010. That’s a positive sign for the hun- dreds of thousands of people expect- ed to arrive in Oregon specifically for the two minutes — starting at 10:17 a.m. — when the moon blocks the sun and darkness covers a 73-mile-wide path that will stretch across the coun- try. Satellite data show that Aug. 21 has been clear and sunny around 10 a.m. each morning going back to 2010. Unfortunately, said meteorologist Colby Neuman, the past few years are a poor predictor of this coming Aug. 21. “We’ve had warmer weather and fewer clouds the last few summers, but you really can’t say much about the future based on that short a time period,” Neuman said. “The long- term average will beat it every time.” And the long-term average — in terms of whether it’s going to be cloudy or sunny — is a mixed bag. STEM is popping up all over Silver- ton, most recently at Camp Invention late last month. Teaching science, technology, engi- neering and mathematics – STEM – to kids is a full-flowered academic trend in many places. It’s budding here too, with the school district’s first Family STEM Night in May, a middle school camp earlier this summer, and now this camp for elementary kids. Eighty-one children attended a full week of Camp Invention July 17-21, where they took things apart, learned circuitry, built, brainstormed, market- ed and invented together. “The best thing is that kids from all over the district, from all different schools, got to work together,” said high school science teacher Clarissa Bay, who led the camp. “You get that in sports, but you don’t often get that in science.” Bay had hoped 30 kids would sign up for the camp, created by National In- ventors Hall of Fame and localized by herself and teachers Donna Becker, Paula Cross, Patricia Hooker and The- ress Stadeli. She was “blown away” by the high turnout, especially consider- ing the cost was $200 per child. Community sponsors and volunteer helpers, many of them students them- selves, helped keep costs from going higher. See STEM, Page 3A The National Weather Service re- ports that overall, people in the Salem area have a 67 percent chance of be- ing able to view the eclipse this year. When you take a longer look back — at the last 20 years — there are a lot more clouds on Aug. 21. Between 2001 and 2009, for exam- ple, five of the nine mornings around 10 a.m. had moderate to significant cloud coverage, according to satellite data. Neuman said clouds in the Salem area would be fueled by marine weather patterns that typically come from northwest, southwest and south. See ECLIPSE, Page 2A MADDY TRAVER / SPECIAL TO THE APPEAL TRIBUNE Cole Ulven at Camp Invention. Willamette Valley faces heat watch LAUREN E HERNANDEZ STATESMAN JOURNAL The National Weather Service has issued an excessive heat watch days before record-breaking tri- ple-digit temperatures are expect- ed to descend on the Willamette Valley. Salem area will likely reach rec- ord 106-degree temperatures for Wednesday and Thursday, accord- ing to National Weather Service meteorologist Matthew Cullen. “It’s certainly not unprecedent- ed, but it’s worth noting that we’ll be seeing these triple-digit temper- atures for at least two days in a row,” Cullen said. The last time Salem reached 106 degree temperatures was in late July 2009. Cullen said Salem re- corded a record high of 108 de- grees on August 9, 1981. He said the temperatures are a result of a low-pressure weather system developing over the valley. A thermal trough, or a heat low, Online at SilvertonAppeal.com NEWS UPDATES PHOTOS » Breaking news » Get updates from the Silverton area » Photo galleries will sit above the region and cause excessively hot and dry condi- tions. “The days we have triple digits tend to happen in mid-July to mid- August, but this isn’t an every year type of heat,” Cullen said. The heat watch will be in effect through 11 p.m. Friday.The watch covers the Willamette Valley, Coast Range, Cascade Foothills, Cascades, Columbia River Gorge See HEAT, Page 2A INSIDE Life in the Valley.................4A Obituaries ............................2A ©2017 Printed on recycled paper