INSIDE LOCAL ATHLETE TO COMPETE FOR USA DEAF WOMEN’S NATIONAL SOCCER TEAM IN BRAZIL | $1.50 TUESDAY EDITION December 21, 2021 SPORTS, A7 Are we in for a white Christmas? By DICK MASON Anthony Lakes Ski Resort opens for season after recent storms blanket the mountains The Observer LA GRANDE — A white Christmas may be on the horizon for the Grande Ronde and Wallowa valleys. La Grande and Enterprise may receive up to 2 inches of snow on Christmas Day, according to the National Weather Service, Pend- leton. If there is snow it will likely come in both areas at about 4 p.m. Wind velocity may be what determines whether there will be snow on Christmas Day, according to Roger Cloutier, a National Weather Service meteorologist. “It will depend on the wind coming out of the southeast,” he said. He said if there is strong wind from the southeast there likely will not be snow on Christmas Day, but if there is no or little wind, snow will be much more likely. Cloutier said that wind blowing hard has a drying impact that reduces the likelihood of snow. Cloutier noted one reason the Grande Ronde Valley often has lim- ited snow is the strong southeast wind blowing in from Ladd and Pyles canyons. “It warms up and dries out the air,” he said. Conditions in the Grande Ronde and Wallowa valleys are expected to be cold and dry in the days leading up to Christmas. On the snow front in La Grande heading into Christmas there will be a 50% chance of snow in the late afternoon on Tuesday, Dec. 21; a 60% chance of snow throughout Dec. 22, a 50% chance of snow late in the morning into the evening eve- ning of Dec. 23, and a chance of snow on Dec. 24. The Grande Ronde Valley has received limited measurable snow- fall over the past week, but that is not true in Wallowa Valley, which was hit with a deluge of snow over the past weekend. The reported snow- fall was heaviest in Joseph, which as of 4:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 19, had received 6 inches of snow during the past 24 hours, according to Matt Callihan, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. The snow projections leading up to Christmas in Enterprise will be much lighter, according to the National Weather Service. Its fore- cast calls for a 30% chance of snow on Dec. 21, a 20% chance of snow on Dec. 22 during the day, a 40% chance of snow throughout Dec. 23, and a chance of snow on Dec. 24. In La Grande the high tempera- tures are expected to be 38 degrees on Dec. 21 and Dec. 22, 36 degrees See, Christmas/Page A5 By DAVIS CARBAUGH The Observer N ORTH POWDER — Ski season is back in Northeastern Oregon. Recent snowstorms have opened Anthony Lakes Mountain Resort just in time for winter break and skiers fl ocked to the slopes on opening day, Saturday, Dec. 18. Conditions were ideal as ski resorts across the Pacifi c Northwest continue to see a rise in traffi c during the COVID-19 pandemic. “There’s a lot of folks excited to get out and ski this weekend and through the holiday break.” said Chelsea Judy, the marketing director at Anthony Lakes. “We defi nitely expect to see it busy, but maybe not quite like last season.” See, White gold/Page A5 Photos by Davis Carbaugh/The Observer Above, snowboarders walk the incline near the Alice’s Wonderland learning area and, below, a group of skiers descend Road Run slope at Anthony Lakes Mountain Resort during opening day, Saturday, Dec. 18, 2021. The resort received enough snow from recent storms to open the slopes just in time for winter break. Painter loves tricking the eye Pendleton artist wins commission for art installation in La Grande By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian PENDLETON — Most all of us have experienced looking at something and seeing only a jumble, then marveling when everything suddenly resolves into crystal clarity. Pendleton artist Jason Hogge cultivates those moments in the art he creates. He loves optical illusions, three-dimensional pieces and anything that tricks the viewer’s eye. Last month, the La Grande City Council approved Hog- ge’s idea for a large public art installation to sit in front of Cook Memorial Library. The La Grande Arts Commission earlier Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Pendleton artist Jason Hogge’s idea for a large art installation was chosen by the La Grande Arts Commission to sit in front of the Cook Memorial Library. The piece will include four diff erent murals in one. selected the artist and his concept and needed a go-ahead from the city council. Hogge envisions about 25 con- WEATHER INDEX Classified ......B4 Comics ...........B7 Crossword ....B5 Dear Abby ....B8 Home .............B1 Horoscope ....B5 Letters ...........A4 Lottery ...........A2 THURSDAY Obituaries .....A3 Opinion .........A4 Sports ............A7 Sudoku ..........B7 crete panels that will become pieces of several murals, view- able from four spots. “It’ll be partly sculpture and partly mural using concrete panels that look randomly spaced and turned at diff erent angles,” Hogge said. “When you stand directly in front of it, it looks jumbled.” The murals will reveal them- selves when viewers look from separate designated spots at eye level — though the last is meant to be viewed from a child’s height. “Adults will have to get down on their hands and knees to be low enough to see it,” Hogge said. The fi rst mural will depict two Native American women gath- ering camas backdropped by a wide expanse of the Grande Ronde Valley. Hogge modeled the scene after a photo of one of his wife’s ancestors and another woman digging for camas root. His wife, Ethel Hogge, her sister, Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Wednesday 31 LOW 39/35 A bit of snow Rain/snow shower WHO’S BUYING OREGON’S FARMLAND, AND WHY? Irene Jackson, and her niece, Rey Jackson, modeled for a newer photo, which Hogge will paint. He bases the second mural on an old photo of a Black logger named Lafayette “Lucky” Trice who logged in Wallowa County and later was a well-known busi- nessman in La Grande. Hog- ge’s mockup of the mural also includes an old bridge, a water wheel, the historic staircase leading to Eastern Oregon Uni- versity and four railroad workers — two of them Chinese — oper- ating a handcar. The third mural will high- light La Grande as a place of rec- reation, education and the arts. In the mockup, a salmon swims toward a fi shing lure. Bear prints and the footprint of a hiking boot mark the soil. A paintbrush and a graduation tassel fl oat midair. Like the others, this mural is still developing in Hogge’s fertile imagination. See, Artist/Page A5 CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 149 2 sections, 16 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page A4. Online at lagrandeobserver.com