B2 SPORTS East Oregonian Wilson: try everything on us. By the time Jacey (the youngest) came through, they were Continued from Page B1 amazing. They won two state (softball) titles. He was the biggest infl uences in my very humble and very gener- entire life, my whole child- ous. The money he made hood revolved around life coaching he put back into with Butch. My heart is shat- the programs. He was very tered, broken and will never strict with his rules, but very be the same. My second dad, giving.” my coach, mentor, the rock Fitzpatrick, who coached for all of us.” the Pilot Rock softball team Amylee Perrine, a former for nine years, won 2A state player and later one of titles in 2015 and 2016, and Wilson’s assistant coaches, placed second the next two has known the Wilson family seasons. All with Wilson as since she was 7 years old. one of his assistants. “There’s a long line of “Butch was well kids in Pilot Rock who got to respected and well liked,” experience being coached by Fitzpatrick said. “The kids Butch,” said Perrine, a 2011 put out all they had for him. Pilot Rock graduate. “He It’s one of those things you was our coach from the time don’t do for money. He was we were 8 years old until well respected by parents and we graduated. He was just players. The kids loved him.” always there. He was going In addition to coaching at to work us hard, but he was the high school, Wilson was going to love you. That was a long-time, and successful, how Butch did his thing.” softball coach in the Little League system. He took Forever a coach the 14U to regionals, and Wilson took over the twice took the 16U teams to Pilot Rock girls basketball regionals with Mike Balez- program at the start of the tena and Jason Gibbs. “He was such a behind- 2011-12 season after four years of coaching the JV the-scenes guy,” Baleztena team. He coached the Rock- said. “I learned everything ets for six years, winning from Butch. I might have district titles and taking his been the manager, but he team to state. was right there with me. “Butch was a lot of fun,” Those girls were so smart by said Perrine, who had Wilson the time they graduated, they as a JV basketball coach. could have coached their “He was defi nitely the type own team. He never took of coach who made you credit for anything. Basket- want to work your hardest. ball or softball. That’s the He would get excited when way he was. He didn’t need he needed to. We were well the recognition. He will be disciplined and he showed missed something fi erce.” us great respect. We went in Perrine, now the Rock- and got our work done, but he ets girls basketball coach, made sure we had fun.” said Wilson was just a phone Wilson also was the assis- call away when she needed tant softball coach for the advice. “There have been some Rockets, so he was a daily fi xture for Perrine, who went hard spots being a head on to play softball at Corban coach and I would call him,” she said. “Whether it was University. “I got coached by him in trying to get them to run a softball and basketball, then man defense, or the girls are came back and coached with fighting. He was there no him,” Perrine said. “I got matter what.” When Wilson’s respon- to help coach his youngest daughter Jacey. She was also sibilities at work changed one of the fi rst students I had in 2017, he had to give up when I started teaching.” coaching basketball and soft- Taylor said some of her ball, but that did not change fondest memories were play- the player’s respect for him. ing for her dad. “On the softball field, “He was harder on me in whenever Butch would just sports and it took me a while show up, the girls would to understand that,” she said. shape up real fast,” Perrine “He will never waste breath said. “He always said if you to help someone who doesn’t put in a full eff ort, you will want it. If he’s hard on you, see the rewards.” he cares.” For Wilson, that came in Taylor, the oldest of the 2011, when he was named three Wilson girls — also Pilot Rock’s Man of the Year. Brooke and Jacey— got a The family had to use a little hefty dose of her dad as a trickery to get him to the P I H t her u o friends b a g n i k l ceremony. a t y B . n o i t a c i d e m f o p l e h coach, but she V and would not change a thing. “He thought I was getting a “We were the guinea scholarship,” Taylor said. “He pigs,” she said. “He would does not like attention on him.” SPORTS BRIEFING Racing action returns July 23 to Hermiston HERMISTON — Coca Cola Saturday Night Thun- der heats up at Hermiston Raceway next weekend. The planned appearance and racing on Saturday, July 16, with Mr Dizzy Motorsports is cancelled because of injury. The gates open at 4 p.m. July 23, with the racing action starting at 6 p.m. at 81236 N. Highway 395. The evening features WESCO Winged Sprint Cars, the Washington Midget Racing Association, INEX Legends, hornets and bombers. General admission for adults is $20; seniors/veter- ans are $17, youths, $15 and a family pass is $50 (for two adults and three youths). In addition, Speedy’s Grill off ers a variety of food and beverages. Advance tickets are avail- able via www.hermiston- raceway.com. For questions, contact 509-845-5510 or info@hermistonraceway.com. Tee off for Eastern Oregon Mission UMATILLA — The East- ern Oregon Mission golf tournament is July 30. The four-person scramble event raises money to help support Agape House and Martha’s House. The tournament, which is open to men and women of all skill levels, will begin with a shotgun start Satur- day, July 30, 8 a.m. Golfers are asked to check in at 7 a.m. at Big River Golf Course, 709 Willamette St., Umatilla. The entry fee is $60 per person, which includes green fees, breakfast pastries and lunch. A luncheon, raffl e drawing and awards ceremony will be held at the conclusion of the tournament. Also, sponsorships are available. For more informa- tion, call Mark Gomolski at 541-567-8774. — EO Media Group LeeAnnOttosen@UmpquaBank.com UmpquaBank.com/Lee-Ann-Ottosen Saturday, July 16, 2022 Peaks: Continued from Page B1 From Santiam Pass the peak has something of the Matterhorn in its dart-like shape, albeit with a summit more akin to a thumb than the tip of a knife as with the Alpine eminence. But seen from the east, near Sisters, Mount Wash- ington is a dome with a sharp tip in its center. The diff erences aren’t so distinct from the west or south, but from both direc- tions the mountain could be taken for a diff erent peak altogether. I had occasion to ponder this matter of mountains, and their many faces, while hiking on Saturday, July 9. The subject in this case, though, wasn’t a single mountain but rather a range — the Elkhorns. My backyard mountains, both fi guratively, in that they are the ones I visit most often, and literally, as I can see a section of the range from my own yard. The site was the eastern side of Gorham Butte, a modest summit — it tops out at 6,176 feet — a couple miles north of the Anthony Lakes Highway. Gorham Butte, despite its singular name, is actually a spine of high ground with a few separate summits, two on the south end and a third at the north, with a saddle between. The butte is the high- est point between Baker Valley to the east and the Elkhorns — not a foot- hill, exactly, but sort of an intermediate summit. It’s also a hydrologic divide, with the Antone Creek drainage to the south and Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Van Patten Butte seen from a road on the east slopes of Gorham Butte on July 9, 2022. Anthony Creek to the west and south. The latter stream, which drains from its namesake alpine lake, follows a glacier-carved canyon that runs nearly due east until it reaches the base of Gorham Butte, which forces the stream to fl ow northwest for a few miles before it resumes its east- erly course. I picked Gorham Butte for the hike mainly because the route, along a road I didn’t recall ever traveling, was on the east side of the ridge, and I reasoned, or so I told my wife, Lisa, and our son, Max, that there would be more cooling shade. Which it was. What I didn’t anticipate was the fresh perspective the road lent to the familiar peaks of the Elkhorns. But fi rst we had to climb about 350 vertical feet, on sometimes steep grades, along Forest Road 7320- 050. Once the road reaches the aforementioned saddle, though, it’s either fl at or slightly downhill. Just north of the saddle the trees thinned slightly and the views opened to the west and south. We stopped, and I needed a few seconds to fi gure out what I was looking at. The view of Twin Moun- tain, in particular, was so diff erent from what I’m used to that I didn’t recog- nize it right off . The granitic peaks around Anthony Lakes, sculpted into horns and pinnacles by Ice Age glaciers, are a reliable landmark, but even those familiar peaks weren’t in quite the right order, so to speak. Once I had picked out Gunsight Mountain the rest fell into position, as it were. Yet each summit seemed just strange enough from our vantage point that I felt as though I were seeing each anew. Van Patten Butte was broader than I was used to. Most notably for me, though, was Angell Peak, the spire that looms above Angell Pass on the Elkhorn Crest Trail about two miles south of Anthony Lake. The scree slopes on the peak’s east side were almost completely snow-covered, and as I processed the scene I realized that I was looking directly at the spot where the Crest Trail was hacked through the granitic outcrops and boulders on the climb to the pass. I knew, even more than several miles away, that the trail was largely, if not completely, covered by snow that has persisted longer than usual due to the chilly spring. It was a curious sensa- tion. But also a pleasant one, rather like encountering a favorite old friend in an unfamiliar city. Besides the surprising vista of the Elkhorns, the road is also a fi ne place to get an overview of the Anthony Burn. In July and August 1960, a light- ning-sparked fi re burned about 20,000 acres between Gorham Butte and the Ladd Canyon Road. It was one of the larger blazes in North- eastern Oregon during the 20th century, and in the fi re’s wake much of the land was colonized by lodgepole pines that, more than a half a century later, form all but impenetrable thickets over much of the area. We could hear the roar of Anthony Creek, still swollen with snowmelt, several hundred feet below. It was a beautiful July day — a few harmless cumulus, pleasantly warm but refreshingly cool in the shade. I was reminded that although I prefer trails, hiking on roads — even roads that, like 7320-050, are open to vehicles — can be rewarding as well. ——— Jayson Jacoby is the editor of the Baker City Herald and enjoys Eastern Oregon’s outdoors. People with HIV are our neighbors. More than half of Oregonians with HIV live outside Portland, often in suburbs or small towns like this one. But with today’s advances, HIV isn’t what it used to be. People with HIV are living longer, healthier lives, with the help of medication. By talking about HIV, we can support our community. Testing and early treatment protect you and your partner. Help is available if you’re HIV+. Learn more and find free testing at endhivoregon.org