B Saturday, December 12, 2020 The Observer & Baker City Herald S URPLUS S TEELHEAD ■ ‘Recycled’ ocean-going rainbows breathe big fish bounty into small lakes and ponds I didn’t want to tell a lie in front of the pastor. But I had a 10-pound hatchery steel- head and I didn’t feel like blabbing to this guy about where it came from. My pastor wanted to go steel- head fi shing and we picked a Mon- day morning. To get to one of my favorite pieces of river, I had to walk past a trout lake. This lake was stocked a half a dozen times in spring and summer and sometimes the Department of Fish and Wildlife would put surplus summer-runs in it. Coming back from the river, I car- ried my 10-pound spinner-caught prize past the end of the lake. At that moment, a fi sherman, spinning rod and worm carton in hand, ap- peared in our path. “That’s a huge trout,” the angler gaped. “Did you get THAT in the lake?” “Yep.” ON THE TRAIL GARY LEWIS Ron Harrod/Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Colored-up summer-run steelhead in the ladder at the Wallowa Hatchery. Bald-faced lie. “Where did you catch it?” “Right there at the end of the lake,” I said. Bald-faced lie number two. We walked on, the pastor and I, and after a suitable space had been put between us and the fi sherman, he said, “I guess sometimes you have to lie.” Truth. In fact, I could have caught that steelhead in the lake because that lake was, and still is, one of the spots where the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) deposits surplus fi sh they don’t need for spawning purposes. On any given day a trout fi sherman with a jar of bait or a worm could luck into a steelhead. Wherever fi sh and wildlife agen- cies artifi cially spawn steelhead, there is likely to be a surplus of sea- run rainbows. And when that hap- pens, the fi sh have to go somewhere. In some cases, steelhead are picked up and trucked back downriver for another trip past the fi shermen. Another option are local food banks. Sometimes surplus fi sh end up going into a big hole in the ground to feed the worms. The highest use might be to give anglers one more chance. That’s why ocean- going steelhead (and sometimes salmon) end up in lakes and ponds. WHERE AND WHEN FOR RECYCLED STEELHEAD East of the Cascades, summer run steelhead show up in big num- bers starting in October. When there is a large run, there can be a lot of surplus fi sh. Ron Harrod, the manager at ODFW’s Wallowa fi sh hatchery, said there is usually a fair number of ex- cess fi sh for the wild stock program. “We’ll get 1,500 to 4,000 back and we only need a couple hundred pair,” Harrod said. “We try to give the local folks another angling op- portunity.” Ron Harrod/Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife To distinguish between river- Hank Ray releases a summer steelhead into Marr Pond in Enterprise. caught and pond-caught steelhead, Ron Harrod/Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife When the hatchery has enough pairs, steelhead, like this returning fi sh, could be transported to a nearby lake or pond to give anglers another chance. Harrod directs staff to sort the fi sh for wire codes (won’t be recycled) and double-punch the gills to mark the recycles, which allows a game enforcement offi cer to quickly tell the difference. Harrod said at fi rst the steel- head roam the pond, seeking inlets and deeper water. Anglers do best, Harrod said, on fl ies, spinners and bobber and jig. Justin Herold, a fi sheries techni- cian in Enterprise, said that fi sh from the Big Canyon facility often end up in Roulet Pond near Elgin and also in Weaver Pond (aka Wal- lowa Wildlife Pond). Surplus steel- head that return back to Enterprise are recycled to Marr Pond. Peach Pond in Ladd Marsh is another potential steelhead fi shery if surplus numbers are high. March and April are the best timing for these Eastern Oregon waters. Gary Lewis is the author of Fishing Central Oregon and Oregon Lake Maps and Fishing Guide and other titles. To contact Gary, visit www. garylewisoutdoors.com A hunt he’ll never forget ■ Jerry Yencopal of Baker City recounts his once-in-a-lifetime bighorn sheep hunt to pinpoint sheep herds even with the aid of powerful Jerry Yencopal’s once-in-a- binoculars. lifetime bighorn sheep hunt The anxiety of knowing was very nearly stopped by a that he’d never get another black widow spider. chance to bag a ram in Or- As if the hunt weren’t chal- egon. lenging enough. And now an arachnid in- Basalt cliffs to clamber jecting itself, so to speak, into over. the proceedings. Late summer skies sul- Jerry, 71, of Baker City, can lied by smoke from distant chuckle about the episode wildfi res, making it diffi cult now, after almost three By Jayson Jacoby Baker City Herald Contributed Jerry Yencopal (front, center) with his bighorn sheep ram, fl anked by his sons, Rob, right, and Jason, left. The Yencopals (pronounced “YENCH-uh-paul) were guided by Sheep Mountain Outfi tters, including, back center, Dan Blankenship, and far left, Josh Graham. months have elapsed. Everything turned out fi ne. Better, even, than Jerry could have imagined. He downed a trophy ram. No venom was transferred. “It was just the best expe- rience I’ve had in a long time, hunting,” Jerry said. More than anything else, he relished sharing that expe- rience with his two sons, who he’s hunted with since they were boys. Rob is a battalion chief with the Albany (Oregon) Fire Department. Jason, who also lives in Baker City, is Baker County’s emergency management director. “To be with them ... that’s what your heart desires with family,” Jerry said. Rob was instrumental not only in making his dad’s hunt possible, but also in thwarting a potentially painful encounter with that spider. A few years ago Rob hap- pened on a new Christmas gift for his dad — applications for bighorn sheep and mountain goat hunts. Those are highly sought after tags in Oregon, since a hunter can draw only one of each in a lifetime. See Bighorn/Page 2B