FROM PAGE ONE THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2021 THE OBSERVER — A5 TREES Continued from Page A1 “We lost basically our entire plantings this year. Now we’ve got another big hole that’s going to suck up any excess that would have been in the future,” Smith said, speaking about the Christmas industry as a whole. Tim Donivan, who runs the Donivan Tree Farm in La Grande with his wife, Loraine Donivan, said the drought compounded the problem regarding the shortages. “There was a glut of trees 15 years ago and the price went really low,” Tim Donivan said. “A certain amount of farms converted into wine production, so that changed the supply bal- ance, and this summer with the drought certain trees turned red and aren’t on the market.” The Donivans have been running a tree farm since their fi rst planting in 1979. Their 3.5-acre prop- erty on Igo Lane north of La Grande is fi lled with trees of varying ages and species. Many of the younger trees had been scorched by the summer heat wave, leaving the sap- lings to resemble the sickly tree from the animated TV classic “A Charlie Brown Christmas.” Older trees largely survived the onslaught of record- breaking temperatures, though a few trees suc- cumbed to the heat while other trees saw only a smat- tering of reddened needles and crispy branches. Loraine Donivan described this year’s weather conditions as highly unusual, and said the heat and drought prevented the trees from developing root structures that would help them weather the dry conditions. “We lost a lot of the Alex Wittwer/The Observer Alex Wittwer/ EO Media Group Reddened needles signify a dead tree scorched by the summer heat waves and drought at the Donivan Tree Farm in La Grande on Tuesday, Nov. 30, 2021. Though most of the adult and market ready trees sur- vived, some were damaged by the unusually dry and hot conditions this year. Alex Wittwer/ EO Media Group Benny, the unoffi cial mascot of the Donivan Tree Farm, La Grande, makes her way through the grove on Tuesday, Nov. 30, 2021. The tree farm operates on 3.5 acres and has been planting trees since 1979. seedlings we planted this spring, and I’m sure that was the case for other growers too,” she said. “We went through and spot watered every tree, including every seed- ling, fi ve times through the summer, but we still lost a large percentage of this year’s seedlings — half of what we planted.” Oregon leads the nation in Christmas tree pro- duction, with exports fueling an industry worth just more than $100 mil- lion, according to statistics from the National Agri- cultural Statistics Service. According to the Cap- ital Press, Oregon grows nearly one-third of all U.S. Christmas trees. Most of the Christmas tree farms are in or near the Willa- mette Valley where condi- tions are prime for pines. According to Loraine Donivan, trees in Eastern Oregon take longer to grow than those in the Willa- mette Valley, with the average growth time of 10-12 years for an Eastern Oregon Christmas tree, as compared to the eight to 10 years in the Willamette Valley. “We’re a lot higher and drier, and they’re a lot more temperate and moist,” she said. And while the Willa- mette Valley is poised to exit its drought starting next year according to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration data, the dry conditions in Eastern Oregon are expected to per- sist for at least one more season. That means local Christmas tree growers will continue to struggle with their crops in the years to come. “We’re just going to have to replant more next spring and hope we don’t have another weather cycle like that,” Loraine Donivan said. Still, the Donivans con- tend they have more than enough trees to supply buyers in the Grande Ronde Valley looking to cut down their own tree for holidays. Tim Donivan said the farm has “more than we did last year.” WOLVES Continued from Page A1 Offi cials from ODFW and from the federal USDA Wild- life Service agency arrived on Sept. 30 and found four more dead ewes. Wildlife Service employees then found three more dead ewes on Oct. 1, and one dead and one injured ewe on Oct. 4. Workers euth- anized the injured ewe that day. All the sheep were in the same pasture. Offi cials estimated the sheep were attacked the night of Sept. 28. ODFW employees exam- ined seven sheep carcasses on Sept. 30, three on Oct. 1 and two on Oct. 4. All suff ered wounds before death, with tissue trauma up to 2 inches deep and tooth scrapes consistent with wolf attacks on sheep, according to ODFW reports. On the morning of Oct. 1, a sheepherder found two injured Kangal guard dogs on an industrial timberland Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife/Contributed Photo, File Five goats were killed by at least one wolf in the Elgin area during a two-day period in late November, according to a report from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. The attacks have been attributed to the Balloon Tree Pack. grazing allotment. The herder told ODFW employees that at about 2 a.m. on Oct. 1 he heard an apparent fi ght between his guard dog and an unknown The most valuable and respected source of local news, advertising and information for our communities. www.eomediagroup.com One solution for oxygen at home, away, and for travel Introducing the INOGEN ONE – It’s oxygen therapy on your terms No more tanks to refi ll. No more deliveries. No more hassles with travel. The INOGEN ONE portable oxygen concentrator is designed to provide unparalleled freedom for oxygen therapy users. 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Kathy Rudd, center, and Mary Ann Taal, right, lay out photos of the La Grande High School class of 1964 on Thursday, Dec. 2, 2021. A small group of volunteers are restoring yearbook dis- plays to place in the hallways of La Grande High School, show- casing the school’s history. PHOTOS Continued from Page A1 with the school’s blue and white colors, according to Kathy Rudd, a 1969 LHS graduate and a Gradua- tion Class Picture Project member. To date, frames have been restored for the classes of 1934, 1964, 1966 and 1969. The work is not inexpensive, run- ning approximately $206.44 per frame. Rudd said the volun- teers for the Graduating Class Picture Project will need funding before they can restore many more picture frames. Rudd is encouraging each class between 1924 and 2001 to submit donations to cover the cost of renovating their class frame. Rudd said each time a class provides full funding, her group will make that class its next priority. In addition to Rudd, the group’s members also include LHS gradu- ates Mary Ellen Taal, Jim Roper, Nan Fordice and Gail Fuller-Hug. The picture frames being restored were pre- viously displayed in the school’s main entrance. They were taken down to be restored and because they were in a disorga- nized state and not in chronological order. “They were in dis- array,” Rudd said. Members of the Grad- uation Class Picture Project stepped forward to restore the frames, Rudd said, because they were afraid the photos would be put somewhere where they might be damaged. The school’s senior classes, she said, deserve to have their place in their school’s his- tory preserved. FEEL THE SPEED, EVEN AT PEAK TIMES. “We want to share LHS’s history,” Rudd said. The volunteers hope to display the restored class photos inside the school’s east entrance, which gives access to the gym and the school’s auditorium. This is a high-traffi c area used by the community coming to school events and also off ers more open low wall space where people could easily see framed photos. “We want to increase their visibility,” Rudd said. She noted, though, that the photos will not be placed there until approval is received from La Grande High School. The frame renova- tion work is being done in the school’s Tiger Cage room. LHS’s Leatha Can- fi eld, a behavior interven- tion specialist and com- puter lab paraprofessional who is in charge of the Tiger Cage room, made space available for the photo project. Canfi eld is impressed with the group’s energy and the quality of the work they are doing. “They are so emotion- ally involved,” she said. Rudd said she has emotional ties to the project because her late mother, Betty Martin Peck, was a member of the school’s class of 1934 and her late husband, Calvin Rudd, graduated with the class of 1966. “This makes it special for me,” she said. 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