A3 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2019 Pheasant fans keep fall tradition alive Hunting site in Chinook By LUKE WHITTAKER Chinook Observer CHINOOK, Wash. — The fall hunting season has started for a colorful game bird from China that tastes like chicken. P heasant season offi - cially began with a bang in late September, but the hunt is primed to continue through November with birds stocked weekly at state-owned game land in Chinook. As the main salmon sea- son winds down and clam- mers eagerly await the next dig, another fall ritual is unfolding in the fi elds near Chinook. Each year, 35,000 to 40,000 pheasants are released as part of the West- ern Washington Pheas- ant Release Program across about 25 sites, including a state-owned 1,000-acre property in Chinook, part of the Johns River Wildlife Area. The purpose of the pheas- ant program is to provide upland bird hunting oppor- tunities. Naturally sustained pheasant populations are limited in w estern Washing- ton due to cool, wet climate and lack of grain farming, according to the Washing- ton Department of Fish and Wildlife . Each Friday from Sep- tember through November, Steve and Tina Padel release birds at designated spots at the Chinook site. The Padels have participated in the pro- gram the past two years, typ- ically releasing about 120 birds weekly . The pheasants come Photos by Luke Whittaker/Chinook Observer LEFT: Ted Jones, of Olympia, prepares to hunt pheasant with his dog, ‘Ripley.’ RIGHT: Steve and Tina Padel release pheasants in Chinook. from the Bob Oke Game Farm in Centralia, where 43,000 birds are raised annually on 160 acres. The farm is the main source for birds released in w estern Washington. The pheasant program is essentially paid for by pheasant hunters, like James Joyce, 75, of Seaview, who has hunted pheasants for decades. “It’s $85 for their ( birds) rearing, which is a fair deal,” Joyce said following a morn- ing hunt on Saturday . “If they didn’t do it, we wouldn’t have this. I look forward to it every year. And they’re very good eating, like chicken.” Many of the pheasants live beyond the end of hunt- ing season and have natural- ized in the Chinook Valley to some extent. They face stiff predation by coyotes and other species, but the spectacular birds can often be spotted from local roads, casually walking along like hitchhikers in fancy pajamas. The Chinook area faces less hunting pressure com- pared to other pheasant sites in the state. “The Vancouver area has 500 licenses hunting pheas- ant out of the Vancouver area,” Padel said. “Last year there were 80 active hunters for this ( Chinook) site that have signed up through the WDFW,” Padel said. “It’s pretty lightly hunted. There are a lot of people who don’t realize this is here.” By comparison, the Van- couver area has about 500 licenses, he said. A small game license is not required to participate, but a w estern Washington pheasant license is, costing $84.50 for adults and $40.50 for youth under age 16. The bag limit is two pheasants of either sex per day. A three- day adult permit is offered for $40.50. Non resident licenses are $167. Supreme Court seems ready to require unanimous juries By MARK SHERMAN Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court began a potentially contentious elec- tion-year term this week in seeming general agreement that juries in state criminal trials must be unanimous to convict a defendant. The justices took up a quirk of constitutional law, a 47-year-old ruling in a case from Oregon that requires unanimity in federal, but not state trials. Meeting for the fi rst time in public since late June, the court opened a term that could reveal how far to the right and how fast the court’s conservative majority will move, even as Chief Justice John Roberts has made clear he wants to keep the court clear of par- tisan politics. The court is beginning its second term with both of President Don- ald Trump’s Supreme Court appointees, Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavana- ugh, on board. The justices could be asked to intervene in dis- putes between congres- sional Democrats and the White House that might also involve the possible impeachment of the Repub- lican president. Roberts would pre- side over a Senate trial of Trump if the House were to impeach him. Its biggest decisions, in cases involving abortion, protections for young immi- grants and LGBT rights, are likely to be handed down in late June, four months before the election. Those cases probably will highlight the divisions on a court made up of fi ve conservatives appointed by Republican presidents and four liberals named by Democrats. But on Monday, con- servative and liberal jus- tices appeared to agree that the same rules should apply in federal and state trials. They heard arguments in an appeal by a Louisiana man who is serving a life term for killing a woman after a jury voted 10-2 to con- vict him. Oregon is the only other state that allows for nonunanimous convictions for some crimes. Louisiana voters have changed the law for crimes committed beginning this year. The court has formally held that most of the Bill of Rights applies to states as well as the federal gov- ernment, but it has not done so on the Sixth Amend- ment’s unanimous jury requirement. “What about the con- stitutional rights of people in prison?” Gorsuch asked Louisiana Solicitor Gen- eral Elizabeth Murrill, who argued that the state’s court system could be inundated with claims if the justices rule against Louisiana. A decision for defen- dant Evangelisto Ramos would result in his convic- tion being overturned and also would affect defen- dants who are still appeal- ing their convictions. But the court is not expected to say anything about defen- dants whose cases are fi nal. It would take another round of lawsuits to fi gure that out. Oregon Attorney Gen- eral Ellen Rosenblum has warned that hundreds if not thousands of cases could be affected if the court rules nonunanimous verdicts are unconstitutional. Rosen- blum instead wants voters to change the state constitution and end the practice. Many legal scholars believe the 1934 vote in Oregon to allow nonunan- imous verdicts has roots in racism and anti-Semitism and was intended to dilute minority voices on juries. WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 FINNISH BROTHERHOOD LODGE AUXILIARY ALL YOU CAN EAT LAKSLODA LUNCHEON & BAKE SALE Thurs. Oct 17, 2019 • 11:30 am - 1:30 pm $15 per person Suomi Hall 244 W. Marine Dr. Astoria, Oregon Public cordially invited! Oct 12 th facebook.com/DAILYASTORIAN S AV E T H E D AT E ! Seaside Kids Inc. Annual Pancake Feed sausage & We all love Breakfast for Dinner! Tuesday, October 15 th 5 pm -7 pm Seaside Convention Center 415 1st Ave • Seaside Adults: $7 Kids under 12: $5 Family: $20 Proceeds from the event will benefit the kids in our community Clatsop Post 12 BBQ PORK RIB DINNER With Baked Beans, Corn on the Cob, Coleslaw, Rolls Friday Oct 11 th 4 pm until gone $ 8.00 6PM “Karaoke Dave” Saturday Oct 12 th • 1 pm Betty Chilson “Celebration of Life” ASTORIA AMERICAN LEGION Clatsop Post 12 1132 Exchange Street 325-5771