Applegater. (Jacksonville, OR) 2008-current, July 01, 2008, Page 9, Image 9

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    Applegater July-August 2008 9
BIRDMAN
APPLEGATE OUTBACK: MY OPINION
Coastal birding
You want to smell
like a man
BY TED GLOVER
BY BOB FISCHER
A trip along the Oregon and Washington coasts is great any time of  the year, 
but springtime is especially beautiful. A mass of  scotch broom in yellow splendor 
greets  the  traveler  everywhere  and  the  rhododendron,  azaleas,  bleeding  heart, 
camas, dogwood—even Oregon grape—add color all along the roadways.
With the spring migration underway, a full assortment of  songbirds is visible 
at every stop. Warblers abound, as do swallows, grosbeaks, tanagers and fl ycatchers.
Along the shores and inlets we spotted hundreds of  western and glaucous-winged 
gulls, along with many Wilson’s phalaropes whirling around in circles as they fed 
on mosquito larvae and small insects.   
Farther out in the ocean waters and along the small rocks that dot the coast, 
we spotted pelagic cormorants, with their distinctive white fl ank patches, and the
pigeon guillemot, with its conspicuous white wing patches. A highlight was spotting 
a male Pacifi c loon with its pale gray head and black and white checkered back.
Farther north in the Olympic range we 
saw  many  gray  jays  and  red  crossbills,  along 
with pine siskins and American goldfi nch. The
best  thing  of   all,  however,  was  watching  the 
spectacular display of  the male blue sooty grouse 
attempting to attract the female by infl ating
colorful neck sacs of  yellow and red. We saw 
several of  these birds on the trip to Hurricane 
Ridge. All in all, we saw 121 species of birds on
our ten-day jaunt.
Ted A. Glover • 541-846-0681
Photos clockwise from top:
Heermann’s gull (Larus heermanni); Ring-billed gull (Larus delawarensis); Western gull
(Larus occidentalis); and Pelagic cormorant (Phalacrocorax pelagicus).
Photos by Mike Baird, www.bairdphotos.com
BIOMASS
tons  of   yard  debris  and  wood  waste 
are  collected  annually  from  all  of  
Jackson and Josephine Counties.  That’s 
a lot of potential electricity! With the
rising  costs  of   fossil  fuels,  someday 
it  might  be  economically  feasible  for 
someone  to  set  up  a  local  electrical 
cogeneration  plant  right  here.    But  in 
the meantime . . .
What should we do? We might 
want  to  consider  taking  up  Biomass 
One’s offer to pick up our wood waste.  
Before  we  start  identifying  a  drop-
off   site  or  hiring  a  sorter,  though,  it 
makes  sense  to  see  if   our  residents 
and  businesses  would  even  support 
this kind of  operation.  Some of  you 
will be selected at random this summer 
to answer this very question.  A short 
multiple-choice  survey  form  will  be 
mailed; you’ll be able to fi ll it out in just
a couple of  minutes and send it back 
via postage-paid return envelope.  I’ll be 
working at Southern Oregon University 
to tabulate the results.  So give me a call 
if  you have any ideas or questions.  I’d 
FROM PAGE 8
love to hear from you.  I’ll publish the 
results in late fall.  
  For now, the Rough and Ready 
Lumber Mill four miles south of  Cave 
Junction  says  they’ll  be  happy  to  take 
your logs or wood chips if  you’d like to 
sell  them  for  energy  conversion.    You 
can call the mill at 541-592-3116 if
you have any questions.  Biomass One 
accepts a much wider variety of  woody 
waste  debris  and  will  take  it  off   your 
hands if  you want to haul it to White 
City and pay a small tipping fee.  Biomass 
One can be reached at 541-826-9422.
Tom Carstens 
541-846-1025
Photos:
1. The author in front of a week’s supply
of “hog fuel.”
2. Loading waste into Biomass One’s
portable grinder.
4. Off loading biomass
3. Biomass One Generator
5. Biomass One’s electrostatic
precipitators
6. The author with Rough and Ready’s
steam turbine.
In the beginning, it is probably 
safe to say that man smelled as strong 
as  the  animals  he  pursued  and  those 
that  pursued  him.    At  some  point, 
man’s opposing thumb and forefi nger
just naturally allowed him to develop 
a spoken language. 
The fi rst sentences must have
been,  “Would  you  mind  moving 
downwind, Torg?  Your body odor is 
enough to gag a maggot.” 
The  next  few  thousand  years 
were  spent  searching  for  scents  and 
perfumes that changed or masked the 
human aroma. 
“We are civilized, we don’t like 
being  predators  and  we  sure  as  heck 
don’t want to smell like them.” 
For a long time we smelled like 
fl owers, then citrus fruits and vegetables
became popular scents.  Recently the 
trend is toward more natural aromatic 
statements.  Man is not quite ready to 
smell like a man.  But at least hunters 
are willing to smell like other animals.  
Specifi cally, like other animals’ urine.
Seriously! There are a lot of
hunting products out there that allow 
us to smell like deer or elk urine.  As 
much as I would like to get a big buck 
or  bull  elk  each  year,  I’m  not  sure  it 
would be worth smelling like urine to 
do so. 
I  used  to  hunt  with  a  friend 
named John Kilroy, who works at the 
Jackson  County  Court  House.    John 
worked hard at changing his own odor 
into something else.  He used doe-in-
estrus urine on calm days and skunk 
scent on windy days.   His skunk scent 
came from a dispenser attached to his 
hat. 
Maybe the reason for my friend’s 
hunting success was that he changed 
his  scent  one  other  way:    When  we 
crossed  a  deer  trail  he  went  through 
the  droppings  like  your  mother  tests 
grapes in the supermarket.  Squeezing 
and jabbing, crushing and sniffi ng.
That was in the woods. At home 
he  couldn’t  change  a  dirty  diaper  or 
clean  up  the  puppy’s  mess  without 
gagging. 
Even after his second child, his 
wife  handled  the  messy  jobs,  saying, 
“John has such a weak stomach.” 
He was a master! The guy
who  walked  around  smelling  like  a 
skunk  and  finding  fresh  deer  dung 
had his wife convinced he had a weak 
stomach—a truly gifted man. 
My  present  hunting  partners, 
Rick Montoya and Rick Colbert, also 
take  the  hunter  scent  very  seriously.  
Montoya tries to overpower the human 
scent, not change it. 
One day Montoya, Colbert and 
I were at our hunting camp preparing 
for  a  morning  deer  hunt.    Montoya 
was  splashing  himself   with  a  strong 
smelling liquid, dousing his hat, boots, 
armpits  and  the  area  best  described 
as  the  confluence 
o f   h i s   a n a t o my.  
“Wherever  you  develop  smell,  that’s 
where you need it,” Montoya explained 
without stopping.  “Montoya, isn’t that 
turpentine?” I asked. 
“Sure! Turpentine is a natural
compound and smells like the woods.  
Plus, it’s powerful enough to erase the 
human scent,” he said. 
“Yes,  but  it  also  is  powerful 
enough to peel paint.  Are you sure you 
want it near your skin?” 
“No  problem,”  Montoya  said 
condescendingly.  “Modern fabrics, like 
the ones you see adorning my body, are 
designed to wick moisture away from 
the skin, not toward it. Remember, it 
wicketh away, it does not wicketh in.”  
This last Shakespearian statement was 
given with turpentine can held high. 
Ten minutes from camp, Montoya 
began to twitch about on the truck seat 
in convulsive movements, not normally 
a cause for concern, but he was driving.  
At the same time, he began speaking 
in tongues, a little surprising even for 
Montoya. 
“Montoya,  are  you  all  right?” 
Colbert asked. 
“EERPP WHEEEFFF!” he
said  with  feeling.    At  this  point  the 
truck began doing things on the gravel 
road that were not consistent with the 
undulations of  the road itself. 
“Montoya,  are  you  all  right?” 
Colbert  repeated.    The  truck  went 
sideways and stopped.  We bailed out 
of  the truck just in time to hear an elk 
herd crash through the dark woods. 
Montoya was doing  a dance in 
front  of   the  headlights  that  would 
have made a headless chicken proud.  
At the same time, he was ripping off  
his  clothing as fast as he  could get a 
handhold.  Colbert and I tried to help 
alleviate the poor man’s suffering, but 
we couldn’t catch our breath between 
guffaws. 
Throughout  this  sequence, 
Montoya was making noises that sounded 
like a coyote in heat. “OOOOWEEEEO-
W O W O W O W O W O -
WOWOWOOOO!” he said caninely.
Then,  ‘WATER,  WATER,  WATER, 
WATER, HURRY, HURRY, HURRY, 
HURRY, PLEEEZE!”
I threw him my canteen, because 
it is not safe to get near a guy who rips 
his clothes off  in the middle of  a road 
in the headlights of a truck! Montoya
began to wash himself  at a rapid rate. 
“It  just  goes  to  show  you,” 
Colbert said, as we watched Montoya 
doing  things  to  himself   that  would 
have  meant  a  jail  ter m  in  most 
cities,  “turpentine  wicketh  where  it 
wanteth to!”
Bob Fischer
541-846-6218