FROM PAGE ONE TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 2022 THE OBSERVER — A5 Hatchet proves valuable for stranded hunters By JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald Wallow County Chieftain, File Wallowa High School Principal and coach David Howe off ers advice to basketball player Kyla Hook in February 2020. HOWE Continued from Page A1 the ability to compete in Future Business Leaders of America at the regional and state level.” The last thing Howe said he was particularly proud of was the increase in test scores from when he arrived until now. Most scores on state and PSAT tests are among the best in the county, state and nation. He attributed this suc- cess to “the dedicated staff who routinely go above and beyond to help students suc- ceed,” he said. “They are miracle workers.” Howe said later that his Christian faith is critical to his direction in life. “I know that several of your readers do not believe in our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, but I do,” he told the Chieftain. “He brought me here and I con- tinue to lean on his will for my life. No, I’m not perfect, never will be. He is still working on me.” Howe concluded his res- ignation letter with a para- phrase from the movie “Hoosiers.” “I’ve made some mis- takes but they’re mistakes I take full responsibility for,” Howe wrote. “I was hired to be the principal of Wallowa High School and I’ve done that to the best of my ability. I apologize for nothing. You may not be pleased with the results but I am. I am very proud of the high school staff and students.” Violence Violence also has raised its ugly head, according to Howe’s letter. “Students have threat- ened my life by shooting me or stabbing me,” Howe wrote in his letter. “As a result, I have anxiety about getting in my vehicle after dark. I wonder is there someone waiting to stab or shoot me? I have night- mares about someone standing in my bedroom doorway with a gun. So violent that it wakes my wife up — I have never had nightmares. The fi nal straw is when I came home from the December board meeting and started yelling at my wife in response to a simple question.” During the interview, he also concluded, “Basi- cally, in my mind, stuff rolls downhill.” Responses? Superintendent Tammy Jones said she couldn’t release the contents of the resignation letter and wouldn’t comment on it. Howe did, however, provide a copy to the Chieftain. “It included names of people that wouldn’t be legal according to our attorney,” Jones said. “It would vio- late our board policy on complaints.” She deferred a request for a copy of the Jones letter to board Chairman Woody Wolfe, who deferred the request back to Jones. Board member Matt Howard, who Howe also mentioned in his resignation letter, was unavailable for comment. Jones did speak highly of Howe to the Chieftain. “He loves Wallowa and there isn’t a harder worker,” she said. “He’s passionate about Wallowa and the kids.” She said his resignation comes amid those of others who are retiring or have decided to leave for other reasons, such as the pres- sures of mandates related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Others depart Howe’s departure is not the fi rst among Wallowa County school administra- tors in the past six months. Enterprise School Superintendent and Ele- mentary School Principal Erika Pinkerton left her post Aug. 30 for a position in La Grande. Sherri Kil- gore, Joseph High School principal, left earlier last summer for an elementary school principal’s job in Pendleton. Enterprise High School Principal Blake Carlsen resigned Oct. 11, to be eff ective at the end of 2021. Carlsen would not comment on his reason for leaving or future plans. BAKER CITY — With his feet freezing and the prospect of a long and snowy winter night ahead with a bloody elk hide the only shelter, Noah Chaney was never so glad to hear the rumble of a boat motor. Although his affi nity for his brother’s new hatchet was, if anything, greater still. Noah, 20, along with his older brother, Neil Chaney Jr., 22 (who goes by John), and Noah’s best friend, Isaac Logan, 20, were in quite a predicament as the sun went down on Sunday, Jan. 30, at the eastern edge of Baker County. The trio had started the day hoping to fi ll their elk tags in the steep country above Brownlee Reservoir, several miles southeast of Richland. Isaac killed a big cow around 9:30 a.m. The friends, along with the Chaneys’ dad, Neil Sr., 43, of Baker City, came up with a plan. They were too far below their rigs to haul 400 pounds or so of elk meat up the precipi- tous, snow-covered slopes. Better, they fi gured, to take advantage of gravity to ease their burden. Neil Sr. agreed to hike to the ridge, drive back to Baker City and haul the family’s boat. He’d meet the trio on the shore, more than 1,000 feet below. He left around 11:30 a.m. Before they started down to the water, Noah, ELK Continued from Page A1 intestines, so an elk can starve to death with a belly full of alfalfa. ‘Elk curtains’ At the Northwest Hay Expo in Kennewick, Washington, mostly men, mostly unmasked, roam around the great hall, slap- ping hands and checking AUCTION Continued from Page A1 meals program, a youth group and a food bank for those in need. The online portion of the upcoming auc- tion will start in about two weeks, said Donna Beverage, a member of the Friends of the His- toric Union Commu- nity Hall’s board. Infor- mation on participating in the online auction will be available on the Catherine Creek Com- munity Center’s Face- book page or by calling 541-562-2038. John and Isaac managed to kindle a fi re that they used to cook some fl ank steak from the elk — probably the freshest meat any of them had ever enjoyed. But they didn’t have a lighter or even matches to get a blaze going on the cold and blus- tery January day. They had a hatchet. And a chunk of fl int that came with it. The hatchet, Noah said, was a gift this past Christmas to John from their sister, Abbigail. They were able to coax enough sparks from the fl int to catch some dry tinder. “It’s diffi cult,” was Noah’s succinct descrip- tion of starting a fi re the old-fashioned way, with no assistance from butane or some other petroleum accelerant. Noah, a student at Eastern Oregon University, La Grande, John, who lives in Eugene, and Isaac, who’s from Prineville, wrapped the elk hide around the meat and maneuvered it, which is to say rolled it as best they could, down through the sage and the rock outcrops, to Brownlee. They arrived at water’s edge around 1:30 p.m., Noah said. When they got to the river they sparked a second blaze to warm their frigid feet while they waited for the elder Chaney to arrive by boat. Noah said his dad had fi gured he could get there by about 3 p.m., so it ought not be a long wait. But 3 p.m. passed. And then 4 p.m. “We were sitting, waiting, hoping that we would hear a boat eventu- ally,” Noah said. At the farthest edge of Oregon, at the bottom of a canyon more than 2,000 feet deep, the dark came fast. The temperature dropped. The wind rose. They found an old dead tree near a decrepit cabin. They hauled the tree to their makeshift camp on the rocky shore and used the hatchet to chop a pile of fi rewood. Then they sliced some backstrap from the elk and had another meal. By this point, Noah said, the group concluded that their dad wasn’t going to show up with the boat. They hunkered down for what they expected would be a chilly and unpleasant night. But fi rst they retrieved the elk hide. They came up with a schedule — one would wrap up in the hide and try to sleep for an hour while the two others stayed close to the fi re. They’d swap the hide every hour. It was about 9:55 p.m. when John said he heard an engine and they saw a white glow. It was the light bar on a Baker County Sher- iff ’s Offi ce boat. Inside the vessel were Sheriff Travis Ash and Marine Deputy Wayne Paxton. They had braved 8 miles of icy whitecaps and blowing snow from the boat ramp at Moonshine Mine Park near Swede’s Landing on Brownlee. “Thank goodness,” was Noah’s reaction. “It was so nice to see.” Neil Sr. had brought his boat from Baker City. But it wouldn’t start, said Frances Chaney, Neil Sr.’s wife and Noah and John’s mother. Knowing the trio of hunters was waiting to be picked up by boat, the Chaneys got word to Ash by phone at 6:39 p.m. Ash said that after hearing the couple’s story, and knowing that a snow- storm was moving in, he decided that a rescue oper- ation couldn’t wait for the morning. He and Paxton brought the boat to Moon- shine Mine Park. Another group of search and rescue volunteers was on standby in case the trio had hiked back up the mountain rather than wait on the shore. Ash said the boat trip on the black water was one of the more harrowing in his experience. Brownlee is about 32 feet below full, and at that level rocks, normally well below the surface, pose a danger to boats, Ash said. “We were running at about 7 mph,” he said. They were able to establish a GPS track to follow back to the park, so they could run a bit faster on the return. The Chaneys were reunited around midnight. Noah said he is grateful not only for the rescue, but also for that hatchet and the fl int that not only kept the trio somewhat warm, but also kept their stom- achs satisfi ed with fl ame- cooked venison. out the latest in twine, balers and tarping tech- nology. Pamphlets, ball caps and squishy stress- balls shaped like little tractors litter vendors’ tables. A vendor motions to a passing farmer, “Hi, ya, how you? Enjoying your day so far?” Clint Vieu is from Walla Walla. He’s with a major tarping services company called ITC Ser- vices out of Moses Lake, Washington. He says one solution for growers is to install “elk curtains,” which are tarps covering the sides of big stacks. Left unprotected, Vieu says, “Stacks have fallen on elk ‘cause they’ll eat into it so much that it will actually destabilize the stack and it will collapse and fall in on the animals.” ‘It’s life’ People who want to participate in person instead of online can do so on the fi nal day of the auction, Saturday, Feb. 26, when all the auction items will be displayed at the Catherine Creek Community Center, 667 N. Main St. People coming to the center that day will be able to submit their bids in writing. Donations for the auction are still being accepted. For informa- tion on donating items, go to Catherine Creek Community Center’s Facebook page or send an email to cccc667@ gmail.com. Every year, elk bust up Anthony Leggett’s fences to get to his hay and crops. And every year, he fi xes them again. Still, Leggett has made his peace with the elk. “We just happen to live in a spot where there’s a trail that they come down on,” he says. “For us, it’s life.” Mobile Mobile Service Service Outstanding Computer Repair Fast & & Reliable Reliable Fast Open for all 24/7 your Call or Text Call or Text 24/7 Dale Bogardus 541-297-5831 Dale Bogardus 541-297-5831 Stay up-to-date Microsoft’ If your with computer is s most advanced operating system to date, in despair call Outstanding Windows 11 Computer Repair! Desktops and laptops in stock www.outstandingcomputerrepair.com Or upgrade yours today for the best security! Refurbished Desktop & Laptops For Sale House calls (let me come to you!) 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