P6 THE SPOKESMAN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 2022 FLASHBACK Fire turns Smith Rock State Park into living lab in 1997 Submitted Photo Girl Scout Troop 438-69 inspects new growth in a fire study plot at Smith Rock State Park. Pictured above are Megan and Hannah Larkin, Tessa Lynch, Molly O’Neal, Kristin Skow and Krystin Previti. The Spokesman 100 YEARS AGO March 30, 1922 — Terre- bonne builds several new homes A number of attractive new farm residence buildings have been completed this spring with several others under con- struction at Terrebonne, ac- cording to Mrs. S.M. Miller, who was visiting in Redmond yesterday. One of the new homes has just been completed at the Miller farm on a beauti- ful building site overlooking Crooked River Valley near Smith Rock. This is a bunga- low of five large rooms. 75 YEARS AGO April 3, 1947 — Alternate route not in budget There are no provisions in the state highway depart- ment budget for the next three years for paving an alternate route through Redmond for Highway 97, the city planning commission was informed in a letter from R. H. Baldock, highway department engineer. Over the last two years the city has been corresponding with the highway department regarding the street. And al- though Baldock’s letter, as in- terpreted by city officials, does not mean the project cannot be placed on the state budget, it does indicate that the state does not have definite plans for doing the work. At its meeting Tuesday eve- ning the planning commis- sion went over routine details of street improvements, and started work drafting a recom- mended ordinance setting up standards of curb, sidewalk, and street construction. 50 YEARS AGO March 29, 1972 — Dicalite mine sold Wade West, operating man- ager of Grefco Inc., Los Ange- les, has announced the sale of all Grefco property presently owned in Deschutes County, including the dicalite mine at Lower Bridge and 31/2 blocks and two buildings next to the railroad in Terrebonne. Pur- chaser is Deschutes Valley Farms Inc. Rex Barber, president of De- schutes Valley Farm Inc., said the old mine might be con- verted to a grass seed cleaning mill and grain storage building. Deschutes Valley will disman- tle and sell other equipment at the site. The acquisition of the 1,200 acres brings Deschutes Valley’s total acreage in Lower Bridge to 6,300 acres. Some 120 acres of the newly acquired property will be planted to seed. 25 YEARS AGO April 2, 1997 — Fire turns park into living lab Hikers, climbers and plain old gawkers flock to Smith Rock State Park each day, soak- ing up scenery and tackling to- pography unequaled anywhere on earth. Now Girl Scouts hang out there and Boy Scouts. And Campfire Boys and Girls. And students from Bend, Madras, Sisters and Culver. As part of an extensive reha- bilitation effort at Smith Rock, youth from throughout Cen- tral Oregon have made an out- door classroom of a large patch of ground blackened last year in a fire accidentally started by a park employee. With the help of the Ore- gon Parks and Recreation De- partment, the student staked out study plots last fall, seeding them with native grasses that re- cently sprouted from the ashes. Eleven plots are set up along the trail near the park en- trance, each group also has a small control plot where nothing was planted, to com- pare natural regeneration with seeded areas. For Molly O’Neill, 12, a Girl Scout with Redmond Troop 438, the project is a fun way to learn about ecology and resto- ration of an ecosystem — and very different from the canned food drives and nursing home visits that normally constitute community service projects for scout troops. “We’re learning about differ- ent vegetation and how fire can do so much damage,“ she said, “and how seeds can come back after the fire.“ Fire is a natural and healthy part of the ecosystem: It thins dense vegetation, knocks back SOLUTION Sudoku on Page 2 invasive plants, helps seeds germinate, replenishes soil and creates wildlife habitat. In a few years, signs of the fire largely will be obscured by new growth. “To a natural feature like Smith Rock, having a one day ‘poof’ go through is nothing,” said Brad Skelton, chairman of the Smith Rock Group, an organization of climbers and other park boosters. “It’s our environment that changed, not so much that of the park.” Of about 300 acres burned in the Smith Rock fire last Au- gust, only 30 to 35 acres are targeted for restoration work, including a work party Satur- day during which 40 ponder- osa pine trees will be planted by volunteers, including a church youth group from the Willamette Valley. Most of the burned area, however, is being left alone. “We realize nature has a lot of recovery power,” said Paul Patton, a parks official coordi- nating restoration projects. Skelton added that as life re- claims the burn, the success of seedings and natural regenera- tion will guide what other steps are taken. “As far as we are concerned, we’ve gotten just about all the big stuff done. Now it’s up to Mother Nature,” he said. “Most of us on the sidelines will be watching real closely.“ O’Neill and her fellow scouts, who have found a fun way to learn something new, will be watching, too. “I like to see how things grow,“ she said. SOLUTION Crossword on Page 2