B Saturday, February 27, 2021 The Observer & Baker City Herald Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald Snow is nearly deep enough to bury fences along the Tuck- er Flat Road in southern Union County near Pilcher Creek Reservoir. T INKERING W ITH T HE T OPOGRAPHY ■ Snowshoeing in deep, fresh snow is a workout, but the return leg is less taxing, even on uphill stretches, if you retrace the trail you created with your earlier toil S nowshoes can’t hike last Sunday, Feb. 21, defy gravity, but ON THE TRAIL near Phillips Reservoir they do tinker southwest of Baker City, is JAYSON JACOBY with topography. especially notable when the But only if you back- snow is deep and soft. track. The reason is simple physics. Generally I disdain the practice of retrac- (Well, it’s physics anyway. A subject which ing my steps on a hike. even in its most basic form is for me not It feels too much like drudgery, and hiking, simple but incomprehensible.) it seems to me, ought never to resemble work. Snowshoes, however useful, will still sink I prefer instead the loop. deeply into freshly fallen, unconsolidated I like to see something new, to step on fresh snow. ground with each stride. They will “fl oat” to an extent, at least But occasionally I make an exception while compared with a hiker with unadorned snowshoeing. boots, but they can’t keep you on the surface Sometimes it’s a matter of safety. any more than a boulder can keep you from Even when it’s snowing and blowing, con- drowning. stantly resculpting and smoothing the snow Which is to say, snowshoeing at the end surface, snowshoes generally plunge deep of a week in which up to 4 feet of snow fell enough to gouge out a temporary trail that’s in the mountains of Northeast Oregon will easy to follow back to the start so long as you prompt your heart to beat well above its head back within a few hours. normal rate. This is much more reliable than leaving a It’s diffi cult not to overdress while snow- trail of bread crumbs. shoeing in fresh powder. Even when the tem- You’ll recall how well that tactic worked perature is well below freezing you’ll likely out for a pair of siblings with rhyming fi rst feel sweat beading on your forehead while names. the car is still in sight. The other advantage of the out-and-back (Sweating, of course, is something you snowshoe hike — and this is the one where should strive to avoid during the winter, the tinkering with topography comes into because damp clothing greatly increases your play — is that the second half is apt to be risk of hypothermia. The concept of layering less taxing physically. — bringing multiple garments that you can That’s sometimes the case even with doff and don as needed to keep from over- snow-free hikes, to be sure. heating — is rarely so valuable as it is when If your route begins with a steep climb, you’re snowshoeing.) then the return leg, when gravity is a tail- Once you’ve hiked as far as you’d like — or wind rather than a headwind, is less apt to as far as you’re able, given the rapid caloric leave you gasping for air. burn — you simply turn around and fol- But snowshoes can pull off that trick on low the path that, in your toil, you’ve blazed fl at ground. through the implacable snow. They can even make an uphill section less The difference in diffi culty between the daunting than the downhill. outbound and the inbound legs of such a hike This effect, as I was reminded during a can scarcely be exaggerated. Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald The snow was untouched along the Porcupine Road, near Pilcher Creek Reservoir, on the morning of Feb. 20. The road, which leads into the Wallowa-Whitman National For- est, is well-suited for snowshoeing. And the effect has not a great deal to do with the lay of the land. If you’ve trod across a fl at meadow, the walk back will be easier because, instead of plung- ing a foot or so into the powder, your snowshoes will land on the much fi rmer snow you com- pressed earlier. And if there was a downhill section on the fi rst half of your hike, it, too, will be less taxing in reverse, even though you’re gain- ing elevation. Less taxing, that is, if you take advantage of the trail. You could of course eschew the path you created and keep plod- ding through untrammeled snow. This is tempting if you’re trying to maximize your workout. But I prefer to think of the easier hike back to the car as a reward. I also enjoy looking back at the trail I’ve made, which in deep snow resembles a very narrow bobsled run. See Snowshoe/Page 2B If You Go ... Pilcher Creek Reservoir is in southern Union County, about 10 miles west of North Powder. To get there, exit Interstate 84 at North Powder and drive west on River Lane for about 7.9 miles. Just before entering the Elkhorn Wildlife Area, turn right, uphill, onto Tucker Flat Road. The road is plowed for about 2.5 miles, ending near a homestead on the north side of road. The road continues west for about a third of a mile, then takes a sharp left turn. The road continues into the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest. While you’re in the area, check out the Elkhorn Wildlife Area, where the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife feeds alfalfa hay to elk to keep them from marauding ranchers’ haystacks in the valley below. At the junction where the Tucker Flat Road starts, drive west a short distance to the kiosk on the left side of the road. There’s ample parking here, and an outhouse. Most days there’s a herd of more than 100 Rocky Mountain elk in the meadow below along the North Fork of Anthony Creek. The Wildlife Area crew doles out hay from the barn beside the creek. You can see the trails the elk have made in the snow between the meadow and the forest beyond.