Appeal Tribune | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2020 | 1B OUTDOORS State parks officials made the decision to close many state parks ahead of spring break this year to prevent the spread of COVID-19. ZACH URNESS / STATESMAN JOURNAL FILE Parks director talks COVID-19 shutdown, wildfires Zach Urness Salem Statesman Journal USA TODAY NETWORK Even during a year packed with dra- ma, the weekend that shut down Ore- gon’s outdoors remains asurreal mo- ment in state history. Beginning in the coastal town of War- renton, where mayor Henry Balensifer declared tourists a “clear and present danger,” all of Oregon’s recreation desti- nations would eventually be closed for nearly two months due to concerns about the spread of the COVID-19 pan- demic. Lisa Sumption, the director of the Oregon Parks and Recreation Depart- ment, was in the middle of that moment and more during what’s been a chaotic 2020 for Oregon’s outdoors. The czar of 257 state parks and recre- ation sites, including many of Oregon’s most beautiful places and most popular campgrounds, Sumption navigated the shutdown, reopening and economic im- pact of COVID-19, along with historic Oregon Parks and Recreation Director Lisa Sumption. PHOTO COURTESY OF OPRD wildfires and wind storms. Last week, Sumption and OPRD as- sociate director and longtime spokes- man Chris Havel joined the Statesman Journal’s Explore Oregon Podcast to talk about why the parks were shut down, how they’ve been impacted and what comes next — including when yurts and cabins will reopen. The podcast also featured Havel, Sumption and I talking about our favor- ite less-visited state parks. Below are some highlights from the conversation, but to hear the entire thing, subscribe to the Explore Oregon Podcast or find it on StatesmanJour- nal.com/explore. Zach: All right, so we’ve been having these kind of conversations since 2014 and typically we’re talking about a wide-ranging bunch of issues — crowd- ing at state parks, drone use at Silver Falls, where you could expand camping on the Coast. This year, you faced a pan- demic that required shutting down and then reopening the entire state park system, major staffing shortages, a his- toric summer for people getting outside, and then parks hit by wildfires. I guess the question is, how are you going to re- member 2020? Lisa Sumption: This is the reset year, this is the back to basics. Anything we thought we were talking about before See DIRECTOR, Page 3B Of clams and rototillers, mushrooms and leafblowers Fishing Henry Miller Guest columnist At every monthly Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission meeting, there is an agenda item known as the field re- ports. It’s a series of presentations from re- gional managers, along with reports about department initiatives and pro- grams from sections such as Informa- tion and Education and the Conserva- tion Program about timely issues and events around the state. It’s all interesting and informative stuff, which since March because of Co- vid has been delivered virtually via Zoom. That’s a popular streaming service, the use of which is no more difficult to deal with than trying to get a bird’s nest out of a bait-casting reel with a salmon on the other end of a line. For insight, ask a teacher … about Zoom, that is, not the bird’s nest. On a personal note, Zoom has be- come the Hollywood Squares version of family togetherness during the pan- demic. RE: Hollywood Squares, ask your grandparents. Now where was I? Oh, yes. The field reports. Back in the day, I always found one of the highlights of commission meetings Not a rototiller in sight during a clamming outing on Siletz Bay, site of motorized clam carnage in a long-ago item in the Oregon State Police Fish and Wildlife Division field report. HENRY MILLER/SPECIAL TO THE STATESMAN JOURNAL to be the presentations by the Fish and Wildlife Division of the Oregon State Police. One unforgettable item grabbed ev- eryone’s attention. Along with various and sundry poaching incidents, the uniformed pre- senter reported that a couple of enter- prising scofflaws had lugged, no kid- ding, a gas-powered rototiller onto Si- letz Bay at low tide. To go clamming, producing a churn- ing swath of sea-life mulch in the proc- ess. For the uninitiated, rototillers, trac- tors with disk harrows, power augers and other motorized gardening and farm implements are not what are de- scribed in the Oregon Sport Fishing Reg- ulations as legal methods of take. Nor are industrial-strength leaf blowers for uncovering shitake mush- rooms, another field reports highlight from a different commission meeting. Turns out there is another way to keep up with what’s going on at the Ore- gon State Police Fish and Wildlife Divi- sion. The section puts out a monthly newsletter about the highlights and lowlights, albeit usually about a month behind, featuring everything from hunt- ing and fishing violations to rescues of people, critters and birds. It’s free in PDF form, and best of all doesn’t involve Zoom. Check it out at https://www.oregon.gov/osp/pro- grams/fw/Pages/Newsletter.aspx TEXAS BOATING TALES - The cap- sizing of five boats by the wakes of fel- low participants during a July 19 on-wa- ter parade for Trump on Lake Travis in Texas reminded me about another Lone Star fiasco involving a pleasure boat, that one on the Gulf of Mexico near Kingsville. I joined a fellow Navy buddy for a fishing junket to a pier to fish for sea trout. As an aside, the late and much-la- mented Wayne “Skeeter” Singleton was also known as “Duck Butt” for the wisps of downy hair around the bald spot on the back of his head. Skeeter and I were alums of the Guid- ed Missile Division aboard the U.S.S. Hancock. Both of us finished out our en- listments at NAS Kingsville after three tours off Vietnam. I digress. Anyway, the pier was about 20 yards from a boat ramp, and fishing being somewhat lethargic, the half-dozen an- glers on the pier were easily distracted by a guy launching his boat. See MILLER, Page 2B