Page 8A OFF PAGE ONE East Oregonian Thursday, August 11, 2016 Barbecue represents good food and good times at fair By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian It wouldn’t be a county fair without barbecue, and the savory smell of it was wafting over the Umatilla County fairgrounds on Wednesday. Some of it came from the food vendors, and the rest was from the annual barbecue contest that gives local aicionados the chance to show off their skills on the grill. Karlos Oneal of Arizona was working the grill and a spit on Wednesday morning at Piggly’s BBQ. The huge cuts of beef rotating gently over an open lame was drawing longing looks from passersby, many of whom seemed to decide regretfully that 10:30 a.m. was too early for lunch. Oneal said he has been barbecuing since he was a kid, learning from a variety of mentors and a lot of trial and error. When he was 13 he was already having friends over for barbecues where he was doing all of the cooking, so it only seemed natural that he eventually landed a job cooking barbecue dishes at fairs around the country, a job he said he thoroughly enjoys. “I love the people,” he said. This was the irst time Piggly’s BBQ was a vendor at the Umatilla County Fair. Oneal said great customer service, good taste and quality meat were all important elements in the business, but many of the secrets good barbecuers use happen before the meat and vegetables ever hit the grill. “The way of preparation is key,” he said. Over at the barbecue competition, Jake Potter of Hermiston agreed that preparation is a key. He and his brother-in-law entered the competition for the irst time last year, and Potter said they quickly learned — as they scrambled to inish dishes while other teams relaxed — they should have done more prep work. “We were busting our butts the entire time,” he said. This year, competing with team Smokin’ Hot and Kickin’ Ash, Potter made sure to have ingredients measured out ahead of time, and said he was enjoying the slower pace. “It’s a good time,” he said. “You get to be at the fair, you Staff photo by Jade McDowell Umatilla County Fair Princess Raylee Lehnert throws candy during the Umatilla County Fair Kick-Off Parade on Saturday. Fair announces parade winners Staff photo by E.J. Harris Tyrel Burns of Weston squirts an apple-based concoction on his cuts of meat while taking part in the Umatilla County Fair BBQ Contest on Wednesday in Hermiston. 2016 competition results Staff photo by E.J. Harris Cuts of beef rotate on a spit over wood coals at Piggy’s BBQ stand at the Umatilla County Fair on Wednesday. “It’s trial and error. I’ve grilled plenty of things I didn’t like.” — Jake Potter, of team Smokin’ Hot and Kickin’ Ash get to have fun, you get to cook and it’s a day off work.” Like several barbecue contestants, Potter said his irst teacher was his father, who taught Potter — the only son in a family with ive girls — how to grill a mean dish. Since then he has experi- mented with technique, often working from scratch rather than a recipe. “It’s trial and error,” he said. “I’ve grilled plenty of things I didn’t like.” Tyrel Burns of Weston, competing with 3rd Degree BBQ, said one of the great things about barbecue is “nothing’s ever the same.” Burns also grew up watching his dad at the grill and eventually started to branch out into his own recipes. “It’s usually just tweaking CAMP: Also offers rock journalism workshops Continued from 1A outreach and education coordinator Bonnie Day. The ultimate goal of the camp, director Peter Walters said, is to foster a “free-form way of getting kids to be creative.” The camp, free for teens, allows them the freedom to follow their interests. Most campers form bands at the beginning of the week and set out to write their own songs for a grand inale concert Friday on Main Street. Some of these bands incorporate non-traditional rock instruments to create a unique sound. A three-person band features Madison Feller on guitar, Noelle Texidor alternating between horn and string instruments, and Brit- tany Mendel playing ukulele. The trio are still kicking around band names, though all three are part of a larger band outside of camp called “The Hopeless Romantics.” None of them had attended Rock & Roll Camp prior to this year, but all three are enjoying it thus far. “I just like being with people who like music,” Feller, 15, said. “Not speciically the same genre of music, but we all kind of connect through it.” Addison Schulberg, who has never missed a day of the program in 11 years as either a camper or counselor, offered his studio, located at 320 S.E. Emigrant Ave, for the camp to use this year. He and his band, Misty Mouth, recently converted the space. Campers have also picked up tidbits on production engineering. Schulberg led a Tuesday class at the studio in which several campers sat in the control room during a recording and told bands afterward what they liked and what needed to be improved. Those who aren’t inter- ested in creating music ind plenty of ways to keep busy during the week, too. Casey Jarman, Michael Heald and irst-year coun- selor Jack Lewis — all from Portland — lead the rock journalism workshops that incorporate art, writing, interviewing, band promo- tion, branding and podcast creation. As the camp has grown over the years, an increasing number of campers have gravitated toward these courses during the week. “The irst year they just had music and some kids realized after a day or two they didn’t want to be in a band,” said Jarman, a former Willamette Week music editor. “We tried to offer them something else to get involved with.” Regardless of their roles, counselors encourage campers to create rather than cover. While other camps may repurpose the work of others, Rock & Roll Camp’s concert at the end of the week almost always features fresh- ly-written material. “I was never a big cover guy — I always wanted to write my own songs,” Schul- berg said. “I think we all try to push that pretty heavily.” things, taking recipes that are proven and modifying them,” he said. He said he enjoyed the camaraderie of relaxing around the grill as every- one’s dishes simmered and smoked. For the competition he was making smoked tri-tip, grilled lamb, potato wedges, blooming onions and a blueberry tart. Paula Morgan of Herm- iston, competing with Grillin N Chillin, said it was her husband that got her into barbecue. She was cooking without him on Wednesday because he was out of town, but the back of her neon orange shirt displayed a long list of awards from previous barbecue competitions the couple had completed together. “We get recipes off the Overall winner: Die Hard BBQ Onion irst place: Die Hard BBQ Onion second place: 3rd Degree BBQ Onion third place: Princess Raylee Potato irst place: Princess JaNessa Potato second place: Grillin N Chillin Potato third place: 3rd Degree BBQ Beef irst place: Cozy Corner Beef second place: Princess Raylee Beef third place: Smokin’ Hot and Kickin’ Ash Lamb irst place: Die Hard BBQ Lamb second place: Princess Raylee Lamb third place: Smokin’ Hot and Kickin’ Ash Blueberry irst place: 3rd Degree BBQ Blueberry second place: Die Hard BBQ Blueberry third place: Smokin’ Hot and Kickin’ Ash internet and then experi- ment,” she said. “We use family and friends as guinea pigs.” The double-blind taste test by judges Wednesday after- noon involved ive entries from each team: an onion dish, a potato dish, tri-tip beef, lamb and a blueberry dessert. ——— Contact Jade McDowell at jmcdowell@eastorego- nian.com or 541-564-4536. Walchli Farms won the overall sweepstakes award and the best business loat during the Umatilla County Fair parade. The event, which was held Aug. 6, kicked of fair week in Hermiston. Also, Hermiston Drug & Gift won the fair theme award, which depicts Traditions and Transitions. The parade drew 145 entries and 11 received irst place ribbons in different categories. Those included: Youth Band: Hermiston High School Marching Band; Youth Dance Group: All American Gymnastics and Cheer; Adult Equestrian Group: Ixtapa Family Mexican Restaurant; Youth Equestrian Group: Contreras Family; Non-Proit Float: Umatilla & Morrow County Child Welfare Program; Motorized Group: Cub Scouts Pack No. 645; Single Motorized: Don Waters; Business Non-Float: First Community Credit Union; Non-Proit Non-Float: OSU HAREC 1942 Dodge; and Royalty: Happy Canyon Princesses. The Umatilla County Fair runs through Saturday. Gates open daily at 9 a.m. and admission is $10 for adults, $8 for seniors, $6 for ages 6-12 and free for those 5 and under. For more information, visit www.co.umatilla.or.us/ fair or call 541-567-6121. ANIMALS: ‘Those goats and lambs are pretty naughty’ Continued from 1A Her friend had to tackle Lenny to bring him back, she said, and now the lamb seemed a bit spooked. She said she had seen two other sheep escape so far. Not all the sheep were eager to escape, however. Madeline White, 12, of Pendleton, said she isn’t worried about her lamb jumping the fence. “Marvin is the king of laziness,” she said. “He doesn’t like to exercise. I think he’s too fat.” He does cause problems by eating things he’s not supposed to, however, including paper, fake lowers and decorations. At the fairgrounds, White pointed out where the white paint on Marvin’s panels had been stripped away in chunks as he gnawed on the bars. GiGi Follett, 10, of Hermiston, said it’s not just sheep that escape their conines on a regular basis. At her grandparents’ house, her pig joined forces with her cousin Cadence Cool- ey’s pig to escape. The girls had to brave a snake-infested ield to round them up again. “We started crying because we were scared,” she said. Their pigs haven’t escaped yet at the fair, but another pig used its snout to push up the latch on its pen, and they watched someone else’s pig take off from the weighing station, knocking its owner over as it went. “I feel bad I started laughing, but it was kind of funny,” Follett said. She said they were also reminded by their 4-H leaders that they needed to keep their feed bags rolled up tight after a goat escaped its pen to come visit the pigs and steal some of their food. “Those goats and lambs are pretty naughty,” she said. ——— Contact Jade McDowell at jmcdowell@eastorego- nian.com or 541-564-4536. SERVICES: Budget could change if Measure 97 passes Continued from 1A System. The projections are based on the state’s June economic and revenue forecast and could change with the September and subsequent forecasts. A DAS spokesperson emphasized in a tweet that Wednesday’s projection is only a “starting point.” The state’s budget picture could change dramatically if voters in November approve Measure 97, a controversial corporate sales tax measure. The 2.5 percent tax on the Oregon sales of certain corporations exceeding $25 million would yield an estimated $3 billion per year in additional state revenue. Sen. Richard Devlin, D-Tualatin, a co-chair- person of the Ways and Means Committee, has said state services likely will face cuts if the ballot measure fails. But he also has warned that the rising costs of the state’s pension plan in the next several years and the Affordable Care Act would quickly eat up that supple- mental revenue. With those expenses, “the money is gone from that measure, so you should quit thinking about all these other programs you would like to expand,” Devlin said earlier this month. WATER: Pipeline construction expected to cost $14.4M Continued from 1A Mike Wick said more water for irrigation means farmers can extend their growing season later into the summer — a point he drove home by emphasizing how early supplies dried up during last year’s intense drought. “You either sit back and do nothing, or you look for opportunities to beneit the district,” Wick said. Building the pipeline is expected to cost $14.4 million, which means farmers must sign up for at least 8,000 acre-feet of water to inance the infrastructure. The district already assessed patrons $30 per acre a year ago to pay for engineering studies. Gibb Evans, vice pres- ident and general manager of IRZ Consulting in Hermiston, said the next step is to secure easements for the pipe through private property. Water would be pumped from an existing station owned by Amstad Farms, which the company voluntarily upgraded to accommodate the increased lows. “All of the in-river work is done,” Evans said. By using Amstad’s station, Evans said the project can avoid the time and money it would take to permit an entirely new pump in the river. The system would be capable of delivering 45 cubic feet of water per second. Of course, there must be water available to ill the pipe, which is where the Northeast Oregon Water Association comes in. The nonproit organization, founded by J.R. Cook in 2012, has been involved in lengthy negotiations with environmental groups in Salem on a multi-phase plan to draw additional Columbia River water for Eastern Oregon farmers. Cook said those negotia- tions are ongoing. Pumping from the Columbia River requires bucket-for-bucket mitigation to protect threatened and endangered ish, which NOWA will accomplish by certifying municipal water rights and leaving them in stream. “First, we have to get the mitigation water in hand,” Cook said. One of those municipal rights — 100 cfs from the Port of Umatilla — is in the process of certiication. NOWA proposes to deliver water to critical ground- water areas in three project areas, known as the East, West and Central projects. The Westland Irrigation District falls under the Central Project area, but is not obligated by anything NOWA does. “NOWA and the region is bigger than any one speciic project,” Cook said. “If Westland doesn’t want to participate, there’s another entity out there that will.” Future phases of the NOWA project also account for mitigation by reha- bilitating badly stressed groundwater aquifers, and upstream restoration projects as funding is available. A water funding package did pass the 2015 Legislature that includes $11 million earmarked for the basin. NOWA’s membership is supported by local cities, counties and ports, Cook said. “This is a monumental effort that beneits the region long-term,” he said. Questions still linger about how Westland will proceed with the project, given a recent lawsuit iled by senior water rights holders accusing the district of cheating them out of their existing water supplies. Bob Levy, the district board’s chairman, said he couldn’t answer legal questions, but did say patrons’ water bills will only go up if they order more water than they normally receive. The next Westland Irrigation District board meeting will be held Monday, Aug. 15. ——— Contact George Plaven at gplaven@eastoregonian. com or 541-966-0825.