6 Wednesday, December 10, 2020 GO! magazine — A&E in Northeast Oregon Adventures of ‘A Wallowa Gal’ ■ Katherine Stickroth has turned her newspaper columns into a book By Lisa Britton EO Media Group JOSEPH — Katherine Stickroth calls herself “A Wallowa Gal,” and her book of the same name is dedicated to all the Wallowa gals who inspired her. “I wanted to give Wallowa County a gift,” she said of her book. “Something they can hold in their hands.” Stickroth compiled columns that were originally printed in The Observer and Wallowa County Chieftain from 2015 to 2019. “A Wallowa Gal” is available at local bookstores and at Amazon. It is $15. Stickroth was born in Washington, D.C., and moved to Mississippi when she was 11. She was a city girl. “We’re talking urban, urban, urban,” she said. It was her second husband, Richard, who got her thinking about moving to Oregon. Well, kind of. Richard, a Vietnam veteran, was from Oregon. “Throughout our marriage, he wanted to move back to Oregon,” Stickroth said. She did not. But she agreed to a vacation in October 2007. She planned it, and their destina- tion was Joseph. After that visit, she changed her mind about Oregon and told Richard “we can move to Oregon if we come here.” But tragedy struck before they could fulfi ll that plan. Richard was diagnosed with cancer in 2008 and died in 2009. “I really fl oundered after losing him,” she said. Several years later, Stickroth reas- sessed her life. Her children were busy with their own lives, and she didn’t want to be, in her words, a “Mom on the Shelf.” And she considers herself “an old Girl Scout.” “I said, ‘I think I have another adven- ture in me,’ ” she said. In October 2013 she visited Joseph, and moved there in January 2014. Katherine Stickroth most response, though, were ones about Vietnam veterans, like her husband. She said these adventures and subse- quent writing helped her grieve the loss of Richard. “I really had not grieved,” she said. “I’d gotten through, but I hadn’t grieved.” There is a reason she chose the cover art of a solitary woman at Wallowa Lake. — a place she found herself quite often. “The landscape played a huge part in settling me down, like a friend to me,” she said. “It changed me life, quite frankly, to be there.” Stickroth is a former board member of Fishtrap, a literary organization based in Enterprise. She also served as public relations director of the Wallowa County Fly-In and as editor of “Wallowa County History: A Continuation.” It was a change from Mississippi, for sure. “That’s really what prompted me to write the column,” she said. “I felt like I’d landed on another planet.” As she began exploring her new home, Stickroth began writing col- umns that were published in fi rst The Observer, then the Wallowa County Chieftain. We are open by appointment only. Please call “I would get into the fun- our office at 541.963.7226 in order to set niest situations and thought, ‘I’ve got to share these up a time to meet with an advocate. stories,’ ” she said. Our hours are Mon-Thur 8-4 pm She quickly learned to ask Fri 9-2:30 pm for help. “I am not embarrassed to say I don’t know something. I wasn’t always like that,” she said. She moved to Joseph in winter, when life is a bit slower. Once May came, she said everyone disappeared into their work. She fi nally understood the meaning of the adage “make FREE eBooks hay while the sun shines” AVAILABLE DAILY and audiobooks — in a climate of limited Thousands of titles Noon to midnight growing time, everyone makes the most of summer’s Unlimited # of sessions at NO CHARGE! It’s PRE-PAID with your taxes. long days. As she explored the Access with area, she started writing. your Baker County Library Card Her topics are varied, from from www.bakerlib.org/kids-teens humorous stories to tales of her dog. Explore the ONLINE LIBRARY at www.bakerlib.org 541.523.6419 info@bakerlib.org Columns that elicited the Shelter from the Storm