Appeal Tribune | WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2021 | 1B OUTDOORS Ski or snowshoe through scar of Oregon wildfire The northern route through the winter trails at Ray Benson Sno-Park features wooden Blowout Shelter, forest burned by the 2003 B&B Complex Fire and views of Three-Fingered Jack and Mount Washington. ZACH URNESS / STATESMAN JOURNAL era in Oregon. In combination with the 2002 Biscuit Fire, it heralded the begin- ning of larger and more powerful wild- fires that reached an apex, in many ways, with this year’s Labor Day fires. Now after almost two decades, the forest burned is a fascinating place to explore, and it offers some sense of what to expect once we return to the places burned this year. (For the full story of the B&B Complex , see StatesmanJournal.com.) Zach Urness Salem Statesman Journal USA TODAY NETWORK This year’s Labor Day fires left an in- delible mark on Oregon’s outdoors, and many places we love to hike, fish and ex- plore are likely to remain closed for one to three years. In the Santiam Canyon, places im- pacted range from Shellburg Falls to Opal Creek, and when we’re eventually allowed to return, those places will look a lot different than we remember. But it won’t be the first time a wildfire has transformed an area in the Central Cascades east of Salem, and there’s no better evidence than exploring the scar of the 2003 B&B Complex on Santiam Pass. Last week, I skied through an area burned by the B&B fire at Ray Benson Sno-Park on a 6.5-mile loop that also in- cluded a stop at North Blowout Shelter. It was the third installment of my series on the popular sno-park, as I rediscover cross-country skiing, an ideal activity for a pandemic. This route, also open to snowshoers, was a step-up in terms of challenge, fol- lowing the North Loop, Twin Buttes, Claypool Butte and South Loop trails on terrain that offered the greatest chal- lenge yet. There were two main highlights. First, stopping at Blowout Shelter, an- other of the sno-park’s wooden shel- ters, while the second was observing how the forest has responded following Dwarf forest on Ray Benson’s North Loop Blowout Shelter offers dramatic views of Three Fingered Jack and a place to rest and warm up from Ray Benson Sno-Park. ZACH URNESS / STATESMAN JOURNAL the high-severity wildfire that burned almost 18 years ago. A brief history of the B&B Complex Fire President George W. Bush called it a "holocaust." Wildfire experts called it a canary in the coal mine. Those who saw it up close remember the speed and fury, and a smoke plume that rose 35,000 feet above Santiam Pass west of Sisters in a period between Sept. 1 to 8, 2003. “We’d never seen a fire behave like that — a fire that could eat square miles overnight and create its own weather patterns,” Brad Peterson, a longtime wilderness ranger for Willamette Na- tional Forest, told the Statesman Jour- nal for a 2018 story on the wildfire. “It felt like something new.” In some ways, it was. The B&B Complex, which significant- ly altered large swaths of Santiam Pass and the Mount Jefferson Wilderness, marked the beginning of the megafire From the parking lot at Ray Benson, I headed out skiing the North Loop, a route rated “more difficult” on winter recreation maps because of steeper hills and such. After a short stretch of intact forest, the trail transitions into the B&B Com- plex’s burn scar. The landscape is marked by the old snags of trees killed in the wildfire, along with a dwarf forest of trees that have sprouted and grown in the past 18 years. The green layer of new trees rises up between about knee and waist height and makes you feel as though you’re a giant skiing through a land of Lillipu- tian-sized people for whom this consti- tutes a thick canopy. Or maybe that’s just my overactive imagination. Anyway, the upside for us giants is See WILDFIRE, Page 2B Flex your artistic mettle with wildlife art competition Henry Miller Guest Columnist USA TODAY NETWORK As the old line goes, “I don’t know art, but I know what I like.” Or, in my case, as far as taste, it’s all in my mouth. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has opened its annual 2022 stamp art competitions. That’s not a typo; the competition is for next year’s offering of fish and wild- life-related collectors’ stamps for the Habitat Conservation, Waterfowl and Upland Bird stamp competitions. The winners each get a $2,000 award, and their art is featured on stamps and other promotional materi- als, with money from the sales going to the relevant programs to benefit fish, wildlife and state-supported habitat projects. I’ve actually scored in a competition, Cinnamon teal by artist Guy Crittenden was the 2021 winner in the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s Waterfowl Stamp competition. The winning entry in the 2021 Upland Game Bird Stamp competition featuring the spruce grouse was artist Bruce Spencer. OREGON DEPARTMENT OF FISH & WILDLIFE OREGON DEPARTMENT OF FISH & WILDLIFE receiving a 2012 Habitat Conservation Stamp ceramic mug for serving as a judge. What’s the old line? In the event of prizes, duplicate ties will be awarded. I digress. Make that divert. My selection as a judge came as something of a surprise. My taste in critter art runs to dogs playing poker, while fine art is com- prised of framed renderings of Kenny Rogers in neon colors on black velvet. Amazingly, I also served on several panels for upland game bird stamp competitions. I accepted the honor because of the stipend, a smoked quail dip during the judging that was prepared by Dave Bu- deau, the department’s since-departed upland game bird coordinator. While I’m no expert, there are mem- bers of the panel who are. And there are department biologists on-hand to ad- vise and comment on the accuracy and authenticity of the fish, wildlife and habitats portrayed in the entries. And those, in my experience, run the gamut from primitive to classical real- ism. Anyway, give it a shot. The conservation stamp offers the most variety open to depictions of ev- erything from mammals, reptiles and amphibians to, no kidding, plants and algae. Waterfowl and upland bird are spe- cies-specific annually. The 2022 com- petitions are for Northern Shoveler and Chukar partridge, respectively. See ART, Page 2B