A12 The SpokeSman • TueSday, SepTember 20, 2022 Classifieds Classified Hours: Monday - Friday, 10:00 am to 3:00 pm 541-385-5809 • classified@redmondspokesman.com 200 TRUCKS/AUTOS 660 SERVICES 219 ATV’s/Motorcycle 664 Services 2017 Harley Sportster 883 Iron, Only 154 Miles, $6995 O.B.O., 541-548-7171 CCR, Can Text Pics 300 TRAILERS/REC. VEHICLES 310 Campers & Canopies Chalet Camper for sale, some ad- ditional related items available, well loved, carefully cared for, call 541-923-8590, 9am-9pm only. Advanced Commercial Cleaning We clean offices, schools, restau- rants, retail stores, buildings, bathrooms, floors, construction sites, VRBO check in and outs We have available cleaners in Bend, Redmond, Sisters and Sunriver. Please call us for a FREE quote. Google Wolves show up on Warm Springs Reservation BY GEORGE PLAVEN CO Media Group WARM SPRINGS — More wolves are taking up residence in Central Oregon, with the es- tablishment of a new group on the Warm Springs Indian Reser- vation and two others nearby. Biologists with the Confed- erated Tribes of Warm Springs first discovered two wolves in the area on Dec. 21, 2021. Months went by with no sign of them, until August when two pups were spotted using a trail camera. That led the state Depart- ment of Fish and Wildlife to designate a new “Area of Known Wolf Activity,” or AKWA, within the reservation. The designation means wolves are settled in the area, and ranchers are encouraged to implement non-lethal mea- sures to protect their livestock. If the group still has at least four wolves at the end of 2022, it will be named the Warm Springs pack. Because the area is west of highways 395, 78 and 95, the group is protected under the federal Endangered Species Act. While the majority of Ore- gon’s 175 known wolves reside in the northeast corner of the state, evidence shows more of them are making their way west to the Cascade Range. Earlier this year, two new AKWAs were also designated south of the Warm Springs group. The first was declared on April 19 in the Metolius Wildlife Management Unit straddling Jefferson and Deschutes coun- ties, where ODFW has docu- mented two wolves. The second is in the Upper Deschutes Wildlife Manage- ment Unit, covering parts of Deschutes and northern Klam- ath counties. One adult wolf and five pups were photographed traveling together on July 4. Another group of wolves, for- merly known as the White River Pack, has been living southeast of Mount Hood since 2019, though as of last year it no lon- ger had enough members to be considered a pack by ODFW. The agency generally defines a pack as “a group of four or more wolves traveling together in winter.” Conservation groups cheered the announcement of the Warm Springs group, while underscor- ing the threat wolves still face statewide. ODFW reported 2021 had the highest number of wolf mortalities ever recorded in a single year. Twenty-six wolves died, including 21 killed by hu- mans. Of those, eight were ille- gally poisoned, four were hit by vehicles, one was legally shot by a rancher on private property and eight were killed for habitu- ally preying on livestock. A 2-year-old female wolf from the Keating pack was also poached in Baker County in August. Officials are offering an $11,500 reward for information leading to an arrest. Amaroq Weiss, senior wolf advocate at the Center for Bi- ological Diversity, said having more wolves in western Ore- gon, where federal protections remain intact, is crucial for the species’ long-term survival. “I hope this will be an excit- ing new chapter in the story of wolf recovery in the state, which is seeing wolves dispersing into territory where they haven’t lived for decades,” Weiss said. The Oregon Cattlemen’s As- sociation has long argued that ranchers should be able to kill wolves that repeatedly prey on livestock. Most recently, ODFW is- sued a permit for a rancher in Umatilla County to kill up to two wolves from the Horseshoe pack on Sept. 8. Wolves from the pack killed two calves in a 4,000-acre private pasture near Meacham in less than three weeks, despite the producer camping 40 nights with the herd and hazing wolves several times. The kill permit is valid through Oct. 7. ODFW to remove fishing bag limits at Haystack Reservoir Spokesman staff report Game fish limits and gear re- strictions have been lifted for Haystack Reservoir, according to a news release from the Or- egon Department of Fish and Wildlife. The limits have been re- moved because of a planned emptying of the reservoir due to required maintenance of the dam gates. Draining the res- ervoir will result in extremely low pool conditions and water quality that is unsuitable for gamefish. “Hopefully, (the fish) end up in somebody’s freezer. It’s an opportunity that folks wouldn’t ordinarily have to catch as many fish as they’d like,” said Josh Bai- ley, general manager for North Unit Irrigation District. “If they remove that bag limit, the hope is the public will remove those fish.” The reservoir is expected to be empty by the middle of November, and Haystack is planned to be filled again with water prior to next year’s irriga- tion season. Haystack Reservoir is located 8 miles south of Madras and 2 miles east of U.S. Highway 97. The reservoir contains a variety of species, including rainbow trout, brown trout, kokanee, bluegill, black crappie and large- mouth bass. mark morical/bulletin file Young anglers fish on Haystack Reservoir in 2012. Worship Directory Adventist Roman Catholic Seventh Day Adventist 945 W. Glacier Ave., Redmond, OR St Thomas Roman Catholic Church 1720 NW 19th Street Redmond, Oregon 97756 541-923-3390 541-923-0301 Sabbath School 9:30 am Worship 10:45 am Baptist Highland Baptist Church 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond 541-548-4161 Lead Pastor: Lance Logue Sunday Worship Services: Blended – 8 & 9:30 AM Contemporary – 11 AM (Worship Center) Father Todd Unger, Pastor Mass Schedule: Weekdays 8:00 am Saturday Vigil 5:00 pm First Saturday 8:00 am (English) Sunday 8:00 am, 10:00 am (English) 12:00 noon (Spanish) Confessions on Wednesdays From 4:00 to 5:45 pm and on Saturdays From 3:00 to 4:30 pm Find us ONLINE hbc Español - 10:30 am (Youth Room) *9:30 AM & 11 AM live- stream at: www.hbcredmond.org Advertise your worship listing today! www.redmond spokesman.com How can hbc pray for you? prayer@hbcredmond.org Call 541-617-7823 to place your ad today! New advertisers get 2 weeks free. 400 GARAGE SALES 401 Garage/Yard Sales Garage Sale: SAT. 9/24, garage & jewelry Sale. 9am-3pm. 3651 SW Xero Ave. P.E.O. Chapter FX, Redmond Fundraiser for scholar- ships. Jewelry, household, out- door, books, electronics, & more! Would also appreciate bottles and cans you can donate to our “Bottles & Cans For Scholarships” Barrel. Cash only, Sorry no early sales. GOT AN OLDER TRUCK, BOAT OR RV? Donate it to HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND 1-844-493-7877 650 HELP WANTED 651 Help Wanted Colorist, F/T, Alterne, LLC, Sis- ters, OR. Apply knowledge of cre- ative/technical image manipulation & sense for cur- rent/historic color trends/styles to film production responsibilities throughout the production phase to including preproduction, shoot- ing & post-production responsibil- ities. Requires: 5 yrs as Colorist; professional membership with Colorist Society Int’l; & experi- ence in: Standard creative methodologies relating to color & depth; Color theory & science re- lating to creation of color mgmt pipeline; Colors & stylistic movements in art/culture/film his- tory; Photography principles; Film stocks & sensitometry; Camera sys (principles/use cases/compatibility); Optics & lens filters; Film lab tech & pro- cessing; Parameters for digital film print creation; Video tech & signal transmission/processing; Digital recording tech (compres- sion/sampling/codecs/file containers); Display tech & differ- ence between LCD/LED/mini- LED/OLED & color depth (8-bit/10-bit); Display calibration; Color mgmt sys for Color Spaces; Noise & grain mgmt; Image framing & re-framing (pan/scan); Digital broadcasting rqmts & sig- nal constraints; Workflow of film & TV productions; Spectroradiome- ters for display profiling/character- ization; Practical/technical knowledge of LUTs/transforms/image profiles& use for color pipeline mgmt/cre- ative look development; Mixing high resolution, RAW & non-raw image color correction from differ- ent cameras & color sciences; Practical & technical knowledge of HDR & SDR delivery work- flows from ACES pipelines (HLG or DolbyVision); Multi-facility file exchange using ACES or OCIO; High throughput color cor- rection platforms (Baselight, Nu- coda, Resolve or Mistika). Mail resume: Jason Fitzgibbon, Al- terne, LLC, 34141 Ruby Lantern, #B, Dana Point, CA 92629. Bend, Oregon (541)749-8974 Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS 700 LIVESTOCK/ ANIMALS/PETS 728 Dogs, Cats, Pets AKC Registered Yellow Lab Puppies Born 8/1/2022. Microchipped, vaccinated, vet checked, 3 females left. 541- 519-6515 800 FARM MISC./ GENERAL MISC. 828 Misc. for Sale or Trade For Sale: 1)Lowrance X-510C Depth and Fish Finder, has all wiring and transducer. $170, 541- 699-6198 2)Kenmore Washer/ Dryer Pedestal, Model Number: 796.51022900. $60, 541-6996198 3)Moving boxes, 4 sizes: Small, 48 boxes, 75 cents each. Medium, 28 boxes, $1 each. Large, 6 boxes, $1.50 each. Wardrobe, 5 boxes, $5 each. $100 for all boxes. 541-669-6197 100 NOTICES 102 Public Notices IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DESCHUTES In the Matter of the Estate of: FLORENCE ELIZABETH FUHRMAN, Deceased. Case No. 22PB08043 NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Scott H. Fuhrman has been ap- pointed personal representative. All persons having claims against the estate are required to present them, with vouchers attached, to the undersigned personal repre- sentative through his attorney, Jacklyn L. Richins, at Baxter Harder, LLC, 400 SW Bond St., Ste 200, Bend, OR 97702 within four months after the date of first publication of this notice, or the claims may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affected by the proceedings may obtain additional information from the records of the Court, the personal representative, or the at- torney for the personal represen- tative, Jacklyn L. Richins. Dated and first published on September 20, 2022 Jacklyn L. Richins, OSB #184300 Attorney for Personal Representative PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: Scott H. Fuhrman 18160 Cottonwood Road PMB 505 S i OR 102 Public Notices Sunriver, OR 97707 ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: Jacklyn L. Richins, OSB No. 184300 Baxter Harder, LLC 400 SW Bond St., Ste 10 Bend, OR 97702 P: (541) 306-2060 F: (541) 306-3045 E: jacklyn@baxterharder.com IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DE- SCHUTES Probate Department In the Matter of the Estate of Case No. 22PB06454 MARK LAFKY, NO- TICE TO INTERESTED PER- SONS Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the John M. Lafky has been appointed per- sonal representative. All persons having claims against the estate are required to present them, with vouchers attached, to the per- sonal representative at: 1530 SW Taylor Street, Portland, OR 97205, within four months after the date of first publication of this notice, or the claims may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affected by the proceed- ings may obtain additional infor- mation from the records of the Court, the personal representa- tive, or the attorneys for the per- sonal representative. Dated and first published on September 13, 2022. /s/John M. Lafky Personal Repre- sentative The undersigned has been ap- pointed personal representative of the Estate of Roberta May Goad, Deceased, by the De- schutes County Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, probate number 22PB06206.All persons having claims against the estate are required to present the same with proper vouchers within four (4) months after the date of first publication to the undersigned or they may be barred. Additional in- formation may be obtained from the court records, the under- signed or the attorney. Date first published: September 14, 2022 JAMES A. GOAD JR. Personal Representative c/o Steven D. Bryant Attorney at Law Bryant Emerson, LLP PO Box 457 Redmond, OR 97756 PUBLISHERS NOTICE: All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-877-0246. The toll free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275. Puzzle Solutions WORD SEARCH